⚡ Key Takeaways

Ofcom publishes its Online Safety Act categorisation register in July 2026, placing platforms in Category 1, 2A, or 2B tiers — each triggering mandatory duties beyond baseline illegal content obligations. Ofcom has already launched 90+ investigations and issued over £1 million in fines, with age verification as its top enforcement priority.

Bottom Line: Platform operators should complete their categorisation self-analysis and age verification compliance gap assessment before July 2026, when Category 1 duties activate immediately on the register’s publication date with no grace period.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
Medium

Algerian tech companies with UK user bases — including diaspora-facing platforms, Arabic-language services accessible in the UK, and SaaS tools marketed to UK businesses — face Online Safety Act obligations. The categorisation register will determine their specific tier.
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial

Algerian platforms typically lack UK-specific age verification and transparency reporting infrastructure. Companies that have not yet assessed their UK user base and UK-linked liability should do so before July 2026.
Skills Available?
Limited

UK regulatory compliance expertise is concentrated in London law firms and specialist consultancies. Algerian companies should budget for external UK legal counsel to navigate categorisation representations and compliance gap analysis.
Action Timeline
Immediate

The July 2026 register publication activates Category 1 duties on the publication date. Any platform that may meet threshold conditions needs compliance gap analysis completed before July 2026.
Key Stakeholders
Algerian SaaS founders with UK user bases, Arabic-language platform operators, digital media companies, compliance and legal teams
Decision Type
Tactical

This article provides the framework for an immediate compliance gap analysis — the action is scoping your UK exposure and determining whether the OSA baseline or categorisation duties apply.

Quick Take: Algerian platforms and SaaS companies with UK users should immediately assess whether the Online Safety Act applies to them and, if so, whether they are likely to meet Category 1, 2A, or 2B threshold conditions. The July 2026 categorisation register activates enhanced duties immediately on publication — and Ofcom has already demonstrated willingness to fine platforms over £1 million for non-compliance with baseline age verification requirements. Acting before the register is published is materially cheaper than responding to an investigation after it.

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