Elon Musk’s social media site X – formerly Twitter, currently an unmoderated bin fire with emojis, has issued a stark warning about Britain’s new Online Safety Act, claiming the legislation risks turning the UK into the world’s first post-ironic surveillance state where even the memes must be licensed.
The platform released a statement accusing the Government of prioritising “online safety” over, say, common sense, freedom of speech, and the ability to post cat videos without first submitting a passport scan and blood sample. “It’s safe to say significant changes must take place,” said X, in what critics interpreted as Silicon Valley code for “Britain’s gone absolutely crackers.”
The Act, cheerfully backed by Labour and now enforced with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer at a chess match, requires tech platforms to introduce age checks, censor content, and pre-emptively guess what might make someone, somewhere, slightly offended. Offenders face fines, enforcement, or being forced to explain TikTok to Rishi Sunak.
Tech Secretary Peter Kyle offered a robust defence of the law, stating that critics were “on the side of predators,” thus formally winning the 2025 Gold Medal in False Dichotomies. Meanwhile, online petitions calling for the Act’s repeal have passed 468,000 signatures, approximately the same number of Britons now pretending to be Dutch using VPNs.
Ofcom, newly armed and dangerous, has begun launching compliance investigations into adult content sites, presumably using staff who drew the short straw at the office meeting. Platforms, including X, argue they are being punished even when fully compliant, a bit like being fined by your council for breathing without submitting a carbon plan.
Elon Musk’s involvement has naturally triggered divided opinions. Some see him as a maverick tech hero defending civil liberties; others, just a very bored billionaire who occasionally buys social networks like they’re packets of crisps.
Reform UK, the political party currently operating somewhere between a Facebook rant and a Wetherspoons napkin manifesto, has vowed to repeal the Act entirely if Nigel Farage is elected Prime Minister, a scenario that polls suggest is only slightly less likely than Rochdale being chosen to host the Winter Olympics.
Critics from across the political spectrum have slammed the Act for being “censorship through the back door,” which in Rochdale is usually a euphemism involving two WKDs and a misunderstanding in Yates’s toilets.
For now, Brits are encouraged to verify their age using biometric scans, upload polite cat videos only, and resist the urge to say anything that might upset a Government-approved algorithm. Those seeking unfiltered content should simply do what everyone else does, move to Reddit, pretend to be Canadian, and pray Ofcom hasn’t figured out how incognito mode works.
