Consultation outcome

Transparency in digital campaigning: technical consultation on digital imprints

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
This consultation has concluded

Read the full outcome

Detail of outcome

The consultation on the technical scope of the new digital imprints regime launched on 12 August 2020 and ran for 12 weeks, closing on 4 November 2020. We received 73 responses. This document summarises the responses received and how the government will take each proposal forward.


Original consultation

Summary

The Cabinet Office is seeking views on the technical scope of the new digital imprints regime.

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

We want to know what you think about our proposals for making online political campaigning more transparent. These proposals will mean that political parties, campaigners and others must explicitly show who they are when promoting campaign content online.

In 2019 the government committed to introducing a digital imprints regime following feedback from the consultation ‘Protecting the Debate: Intimidation, Influence, and Information’ which indicated broad support for the idea.

We have engaged intensively with stakeholders on how to put this into practice and this consultation outlines the technical rules for how the regime would operate.

The consultation is aimed at voters, political parties, social media and technology companies, prospective or elected representatives and civil society organisations throughout the United Kingdom.

Documents

Transparency in digital campaigning: technical consultation on digital imprints

Request an accessible format.
If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email accessible.formats@cabinetoffice.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Updates to this page

Published 12 August 2020
Last updated 15 June 2021 + show all updates
  1. Added government consultation response

  2. First published.

Sign up for emails or print this page