---
title: 'Video PKvLUJ-4r50'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=PKvLUJ-4r50'
video_id: 'PKvLUJ-4r50'
date: 2026-06-14
duration_sec: 0
---

# Video PKvLUJ-4r50

> Source: [Video PKvLUJ-4r50](https://youtube.com/watch?v=PKvLUJ-4r50)

## Summary

The UK is drafting a law to scan every photo, video, and message on every phone in the country, requiring device-level scanners to inspect content before encryption. The speaker argues this is a privacy invasion and a slippery slope toward censorship, warning that similar laws are spreading globally.

### Key Points

- **UK Law Overview** [0:00] — The UK is drafting a law to scan every image, message, and video on personal devices, sending them to a database for analysis.
- **Privacy Invasion** [0:21] — Taking a picture of your cat, dog, or family would instantly be sent to a database for scanning, invading privacy.
- **Global Spread** [0:33] — Similar censorship and digital ID laws have spread from the UK to the EU, Canada, and the US.
- **Previous Predictions** [1:17] — A year ago, the speaker warned about the Digital Safety Act; many called him an over-exaggerating doomer, but now similar laws are being introduced.
- **Canada's Social Media Ban** [2:30] — Canada is introducing a social media ban for under-16s, which the speaker sees as a starting point for further privacy invasions.
- **Law Details** [3:44] — Tech CEOs who refuse to implement device-level scanners could face up to 5 years in prison. Content is inspected before encryption.
- **Data Breach Examples** [5:21] — Europe's age verification app was hacked in under 2 minutes, and over 70,000 IDs and selfies were exposed in a major breach.
- **Think of the Children** [6:06] — The 'think of the children' slogan is used to push surveillance, but the real goal is monitoring adults' political alignment and opinions.

### Conclusion

The speaker warns that once governments force surveillance tools into every phone, there is no going back, and privacy will be lost globally. He urges people to push back against these laws.

## Transcript

Shimineta should not have been a
warning. It should have stayed as a
parody, but here we are. The UK has now
introduced a law that they're drafting
up to where they will now scan every
single image, message, and video and
analyze it soon as it is introduced on
your personal devices. They will send it
to some form of database or wherever to
scan it and make sure you're not a
criminal. That means for instance you
pull out your phone, you take a picture
of your cat, your dog, your family, your
kid, whatever, or yourself, they will
instantly send that picture, that video,
or whatever instantly to some form of
database to scan it and invade your
privacy. And for those that think that
this is not going to affect you because
you don't live in the UK, I would like
to remind everybody that all this
censorship, all this digital ID, all
this age verification, enforced age
verification through face scanning and
everything, it started with the UK and
it slipped into the EU, it slipped into
Canada, it slipped into the United
States. Look at what for instance
Discord's doing. Let's look at what
Apple is doing. You get the point. We
have seen that this is not just
affecting one government, one country.
This is a worldwide phenomenon that is
getting worse. And if you don't push
back against it, you don't raise your
concerns and voice against it, it will
continuously get worse. It's a slippery
slope of censorship and the lack of
freedom. Your your privacy getting
invaded so to speak. And so we need to
really talk about what this necessarily
means and just how bad it is. So
literally a year ago, when I first
started covering this news about the
digital safety act that the UK
government introduced that was basically
trying to force age verify everyone that
would try to access the internet,
everybody said at that time there was
quite a few people that said I was an
over exaggerating doomer. That I was
just a doomer, I was over exaggerating,
it's not going to be that bad. That's
what a lot of people told me. But now we
are a year after all those events and we
now have something like this being
introduced. And we have many examples of
government agencies and these companies
that say that your data is safe being
hacked and your personal government IDs
and everything being shared on the black
market on you know different sites and
stuff on you know the dark web. It is a
very bad situation and the fact that the
UK government is pushing this forward
really goes to show the priorities of
what they're doing and that they don't
really care about their general
populace. They don't care about the
people that live in their country. They
more or less are just trying to really
restrict everybody from speaking out
against them and speaking out about how
they don't like how the government is
operating within the UK and you can see
this as a systematic effect that is not
just affecting UK, but it's affecting
basically almost every single government
in the western sphere of the world
globally. It is and everybody has seen
it. I mean, I would like to pull this
one up here.
We have Canada. This literally was an
article that came out yesterday. Canada
is also introducing a under social media
under 16 social media ban. Now, at first
glance, it's like, okay, why would you
want kids on social media? But as I've
been saying for literally over a year,
this is where it starts. They they open
the door up with saying, why would you
not want to ban kids from social media?
But this is where they slip in their the
invasion of privacy and how you get to
eventually a situation like what's going
on here with the UK cuz I would like to
remind everybody when these digital ID
laws started coming into place to all
for thinking of the children, it started
with that type of statement, those
slogans. And then it is eventually just
eroded away adults' privacy, eroded away
people's privacy in general to be able
to speak online and even take funny
pictures of their animals without the
big daddy government spying in on them.
It's a pretty bad situation. So, for
those thinking that this is just going
to stop here at Canada, you're sadly
mistaken. Like it it's going to get a
lot worse. I mean, there's already laws
in place in the United States that
they're currently right now trying to
pass too and actually make it to where
everything is scanned, to where your
actual phone is scanned and everything.
If you think I'm joking, you can easily
look it up. There's a lot of laws like
COSTA for instance that is trying to get
passed right now within the United
States. But I'm getting off track. I
need to get back into the UK stuff. So,
this UK stuff that came out, I would
like to read this entire thing in the
article about it of what this
necessarily means. So, breaking, the UK
is drafting a law to scan every photo,
video, and message on every phone in the
country. Tech CEOs who refuse to
implement this could face up to 5 years
in prison. The proposal would force
companies to build device-level scanners
and inspect content before encryption.
So, basically, like I already outlined
at the beginning of this video, soon as
you, let's say, click record on your
phone, you take a picture, instantly it
will be scanned. They want spyware
installed on your phones at all time to
know what you're doing. This is
basically what China does to their
populace. And when you are reaching the
level of China, you have lost the plot.
Like, China would be at all in terms of
the lack of privacy and spying in on
their citizens. Because the fact that
the UK is reaching those levels and
potentially might even surpass China in
that regard is actually freaking
bonkers. But, the point here, let's
continue reading. So, the proposal would
force companies to build device-level
scanners that inspect content before
encryption. That means every image
scanned, every message inspected, every
video analyzed, all directly on your
phone. And I would like to remind you
that would mean that if it's all getting
scanned, this is going to be probably
using your data to send this information
over to the governments, and it's
probably going to be racking up maybe
monthly bills or whatever. I could be
wrong there, but I mean, the fact that
they're scanning your data means that
they're going to need internet access,
and they're going to have to know what
you're doing at all times, and your
geolocation, which means that if you
theoretically get into an area with no
service, there might be a red flag alarm
bell that might play or something. Who
knows? Like, that might be implemented.
But, governments and companies pushing
these safety systems already have a
terrible track record protecting user
data. Last month, Europe's new age
verification app, promoted as a way to
keep children safe, was hacked in under
2 minutes. I made a video literally
talking about this. And in another case,
over 70,000 IDs and selfies linked to
online verification systems were exposed
in a major a major breach. That was
Discord, as we know, but they're still
forcing global age verification, by the
way. Now, the UK wants even deeper
access directly into your device. Once
governments force surveillance tools
into every phone, they can expand what's
get monitored at any time, which is very
true. Once the door is open and you
allow them into your devices, there's no
going back. They have full access to
your devices and it is GG for your
privacy at all times. And if you say the
wrong thing, you're getting arrested or
getting a fine. Now going to the
original source article, it literally
starts off exactly what I've been
talking about. Think of the children is
the oldest skeleton key in the political
toolbox and the British government has
to jam it into the lock on every phone
in the country. And honestly, this
article start could not be any more
correct. Pretty much that is how they
get you because they shut down any
debates or any pushback because they're
like, why would you not want to block
children from being online to seeing
dangerous content? Which in general,
yeah, like in a perfect world in a
perfect society where there isn't
someone that's going to be using these
laws against you, that this is a good
thing to keep children from seeing bad
things. But the problem here is if that
is not what this is about. We have all
seen this. We all know what's going on
here. Everybody that isn't turning a
blind eye knows that this is not about
think of the children. This is about
knowing what you're doing as an adult,
your location, what you're saying, your
political alignment, your opinions on
certain politicians, everything in
between. They want to know what you're
doing. And so this slogan think of the
children is just used as a way to get
away with this, but obviously people are
starting to become very well aware of
this slogan and knowing that it's a way
to basically assume power and take
control away from you as a person.
Honestly, this entire situation is
legitimately terrible and it's getting a
lot worse and I just I'm really sad to
see just the overall spiral out of
control with like, you know, just the
lack of like um privacy
globally honestly at this point. It's
getting worse. And for those that think
that this is not going to hit the United
States, this is not going to hit, you
know, Canada, this is not going to hit
Europe, this is not going to hit even
Japan, you're lying to yourself. We have
seen that this is creeping and getting a
lot worse as time goes on. The same
people that called me an
over-exaggerating doomer is now
basically kind of silent at this point
because I have been proven right once
again and I continuously get proven
right once again because it's obvious.
It's obvious what is going on. But I
will leave it at that. I just wanted to
bring this to everybody's attention
because I like to spread awareness of
what's going on and a lot of people want
to be aware of the digital ID laws and
stuff that's going on globally and I
think this is very important to talk
about and it's probably the most
important thing I could talk about today
over anything else. But I love you guys.
You have a wonderful day or night
wherever you live. Be safe, stay
healthy. Chibi out.
