In a bold enforcement move, Britain’s communications regulator Ofcom has fined U.S.-based imageboard 4Chan £20,000 for failing to comply with legally binding information requests under the UK’s Online Safety Act, and is threatening an additional £100 daily penalty (up to £6,000) until compliance is met. This marks the first penalty imposed under the new law. Britain claims 4Chan ignored demands for its global revenue breakdown and its “illegal harms risk assessment” tied to illegal content on the platform. 4Chan, headquartered in Delaware, responded by refusing to pay and filing a lawsuit in a U.S. federal court, arguing Ofcom’s reach is an overstep that infringes on Americans’ free speech rights. Meanwhile, Ofcom has launched nine investigations under the Act into 4Chan, several file-sharing sites, and porn platforms over potential failures to implement adequate safeguards for UK users. The standoff spotlights fundamental tension between the UK’s drive to regulate online harm and U.S. concerns over cross-border regulation of speech.
Key Takeaways
– The UK has used its newly enacted Online Safety Act to fine 4Chan £20,000 and threaten daily penalties for noncompliance, pushing to extend its regulatory reach over a U.S.-based platform.
– 4Chan rejects the fine, countering with legal action in the U.S., asserting Ofcom’s demands violate constitutional free speech protections and exceed jurisdiction.
– The incident is part of a broader effort by Ofcom to investigate multiple platforms—including file-sharing sites and adult content providers—for failing to adhere to mandatory content risk assessments and safety duties under the UK law.
In-Depth
The enforcement of the Online Safety Act (OSA) against 4Chan is fast becoming a landmark case in the evolving battlefield over digital regulation and free speech across borders. Passed in 2023, the OSA gives Britain’s regulator Ofcom sweeping authority to demand information, force content removal, or even block access to platforms deemed harmful to children or UK users. Under the law, failure to comply can bring fines up to £18 million or 10% of global revenue. In 2025, Ofcom opened investigations into nine services, naming 4Chan among them, amid complaints of illegal content and nonresponse to statutory demands.
In June 2025, Ofcom formally notified 4Chan of its obligations: to submit a risk assessment for illegal content, respond to information requests, and safeguard users from illegal material. 4Chan, however, did not comply. In October, Ofcom issued a fine of £20,000 and threatened £100 per day in additional penalties until 60 days or until full compliance. Though modest relative to the maximum penalty, the action signals Ofcom intends to flex its muscles even during enforcement.
4Chan’s reaction has been defiant. Its lawyers argue that as an American entity, it is shielded by the U.S. Constitution’s free speech protections, and that British regulators lack authority to compel compliance. The platform refuses to pay and has filed suit in a U.S. federal court to block Ofcom’s enforcement efforts. Allied sites like Kiwi Farms have joined the legal pushback.
The standoff raises thorny questions. Can a nation impose content rules on platforms based elsewhere if they are accessible domestically? Does the UK’s duty of care to protect minors justify this extraterritorial reach? For U.S. platforms, acquiescence could set a dangerous precedent—opening the door to a patchwork of regulatory demands from many countries. But for the UK and others pushing stricter governance, such enforcement is seen as essential to combat harmful content that crosses borders effortlessly.
As 4Chan refuses to bow, the broader implications will play out in courts. Either outcome could reshape how countries regulate speech online, and how platforms respond to competing legal regimes.

