World Watch/Philippines/Internet & Online Safety

Internet & Online Safety · Philippines

Internet & Online Safety - Philippines

PartialNo single comprehensive online-safety statute. A patchwork of sector-specific laws governs the space: the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012 (RA 10175), the Anti-OSAEC and Anti-CSAEM Act of 2022 (RA 11930), the Internet Transactions Act of 2023 (RA 11967, fully effective 20 June 2025), and the SIM Registration Act of 2022 (RA 11934). Several comprehensive social-media-regulation bills are pending in the 20th Congress.

The Philippines regulates online content and safety through a fragmented set of laws rather than a single DSA/OSA-style regime: cyber-libel and core cyber-offenses (RA 10175), strong child-protection mandates with platform takedown duties (RA 11930), e-commerce platform liability and government takedown/blacklist powers (RA 11967), and SIM registration (RA 11934). There is no general statutory duty-of-care or systemic-risk framework for large platforms, and broad social-media accountability and age-restriction bills remain at the proposal stage. Enforcement currently relies on agencies like the CICC, NTC and DTI, as seen in the 2026 push to compel Roblox to adopt child-safety measures.

Core cybercrime / cyber-libel law

RA 10175 (Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012) criminalizes online libel (penalized one degree higher than print libel), cybersex, computer-related fraud and identity theft. The Supreme Court upheld online libel but limited liability to the original author of a post, not those who merely react or share.

Child online-safety duties on platforms

RA 11930 (Anti-OSAEC/CSAEM Act, 2022) requires internet intermediaries and ISPs to adopt anti-CSAEM policies, preserve data, block illegal content within 24 hours and report to the DOJ; adult-content providers must use anonymous age verification. It repealed the 2009 Anti-Child Pornography Act and amended the AMLA.

Platform liability (e-commerce)

RA 11967 (Internet Transactions Act of 2023), fully enforced from 20 June 2025, imposes subsidiary liability on e-marketplaces/digital platforms that fail to act expeditiously on takedown notices, and empowers the DTI to issue subpoenas, compliance and takedown orders, and to publicly blacklist non-compliant sites, apps and social-media accounts.

Identity / SIM registration

RA 11934 (SIM Registration Act, 2022) mandates registration of all SIM cards to curb fraud, scams, trolling and disinformation. A prior version covering social-media accounts was vetoed by President Duterte in April 2022 over surveillance and free-speech concerns, and rights groups continue to flag mass-surveillance risks.

No comprehensive platform regime; bills pending

Unlike the EU DSA, UK OSA or Australia's scheme, the Philippines has no general duty-of-care or systemic-risk law. The 20th Congress is weighing measures such as a Social Media Accountability Council (HB 7300), a Social Media Platform Franchise Act (HB 934), and bills setting an under-18 social-media age limit with ID/facial-recognition age verification — all still proposals.

Agency-led enforcement and content blocking

Regulators wield blocking powers in practice: in March–April 2026 the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC), with the NTC and major telcos (PLDT, Smart, Globe), threatened to block Roblox over child-safety concerns before securing platform commitments instead of an outright ban.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →