I didn't really understand the question so I am struggling to summarise it, but I think it is "how do small sites comply"?

Ofcom:

1) we will approach things in a proportionate manner

2) we have published some practical guidance, and a digital service (based on interviewing 50 "smaller" service providers (but I don't know how small "smaller" might be)

3) we are trying to be clear about the minimum set of actions

Yes, this feels like a lot of work, but hopefully it will become easier over time (i.e. each admin doing this only has to do it for the first time once).

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Ofcom: hopefully, most sites have things in place already for some of it, like a contact point, or a way of trying to take down content.

nostr:nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpq98t8kgwqas59rvmnghzcdn6krzhxhpkyt2mt53e4g9sdnj74sszsv4x759 I've just been through as much of the OFCOM OSA risk assessment requirement as I currently understand this for a small community marketplace site where users mostly know each other. For our purpose it seems way OTT, but I wanted to know more about the OSA anyway. One takeaway is we would have to review it again if we wanted under 18s to be able to open accounts - currently we don't have any and this hasn't been requested, but the effect would be a bit chilling in this sense, e.g. if we'd have to take down adverts for 2nd hand crafting tools because a collection of such might include a knife. We're very low risk as we know our users. Being contactable for complaints and being able to take down offending content seem to meet the main requirements from our perspective.