The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 77 tabled · 56 answered

Written questions by Lamb.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Peter Lamb this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (77)Department of Health and Social Care (11)Department for Work and Pensions (10)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (9)Department for Education (8)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (7)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (6)Department for Business and Trade (5)Department for Transport (4)Home Office (4)Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (2)Treasury (2)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (2)

Showing 12 of 2 · Department for Science, Innovation and Technology

14 May 2025·Department for Science, Innovation and Technology·Answered
Asked

Innovation and Technology, if he will have discussions with Meta on removing monkey abuse content from its platforms.

Reply

Government ministers and officials regularly discuss online safety matters with stakeholders including online platforms such as Meta.Under the Online Safety Act’s ‘illegal content duties’, social media platforms including Meta have duties to implement measures to tackle animal abuse content and remove it from their services. Ofcom is the UK’s independent regulator for online safety responsible for regulating services and taking enforcement action as appropriate. It has published recommendations for how providers should fulfil their illegal content duties in codes of practice and documentation. These include specific provisions about animal abuse content. These duties took effect on 17 March.

20 Mar 2025·Department for Science, Innovation and Technology·Answered
Asked

Innovation and Technology, what steps he is taking with Cabinet colleagues to encourage social media companies to tackle animal abuse content online.

Reply

Animal abuse content is horrific, and social media companies must do more to tackle it.Social media platforms and search services have duties to tackle animal abuse content and implement safety-by-design features under the Online Safety Act.Ofcom – the independent regulator - has published recommendations for how providers should tackle such content under their ‘illegal content duties’.These duties took effect on 17 March and Ofcom have strong enforcement powers to hold companies accountable for failing to meet their obligations.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.