Thanks a lot, Dimi, for this valuable brief on EU developments!

 

Od: Dimi Dimitrov <[email protected]> 
Odesláno: středa 1. března 2023 12:41
Komu: [email protected]
Předmět: [Publicpolicy] EU Policy Monitoring Report - February 2023

 

Hello, everyone! Almost two weeks ago online platforms released their user 
numbers for the EU, including the Wikimedia Foundation, an obligation under the 
DSA. Else, the Commission is running a consultation on… well… de facto net 
neutrality. Meanwhile, the Parliament and Council are starting to think hard 
about liability and security of software, including a potential liability 
carve-out for free & open software. 

 

=== Digital Services Act ===

The EU’s new content moderation rules have a number of special obligations - 
transparency, annual risk assessment, mitigation plans, third-party audits -  
for so-called very large online platforms (VLOP). A VLOP is any platform that 
averages more than 45 million monthly active recipients within the EU. 
Platforms had until 17 February to declare their numbers. Here is a list of 
declarations: [1]. So far, 18 self-declared very large online platforms and 
search engines. Among them, Wikipedia is the only not-for-profit. 

—

For the Wikimedia Foundation it was of utmost importance to produce reliable 
user numbers without gathering additional data. Wikimedia records only the 
number of unique devices, not actual users. The “EU DSA Userbase Statistics” 
[2] uses the unique devices data and a conservative estimation taken from the 
Cisco Annual Internet Reports on how many devices per person there are. It is 
important that there is at least one VLOP out there whose operator is 
demonstrating how one can comply while protecting fundamental rights such as 
privacy. So far, there is no indication that the European Commission intends to 
challenge the Foundation’s methodology.

—

The European Commission will soon officially designate VLOPs, after which 
platforms will have a further four months to start complying with the specific 
obligations, while all the other obligations that aren’t specific to VLOPs will 
only apply from 17 February 2024.  One of the challenges will be to find a 
third-party auditing body that annually checks the risk assessments and 
mitigation measures. It would be exciting to see not-for-profit or community 
led initiatives here, instead of the The Big Four [3] professional services 
firms dominating the field. 

 

=== Cyber Resilience Act ===

The Cyber Resilience Act is a proposed regulation by the European Commission 
aiming to introduce baseline cybersecurity requirements for digital products 
and services. It includes such obligations as security tests and security 
updates for up to five years after a product or even a piece of software. [4]

—

The European Commission is proposing a carve-out for free & open source 
software, which we welcome. However, the carve-out is only in a recital (which 
is the “non-active” part of a EU law), instead in a proper article. It also 
restricts the protection to “software developed or supplied outside the course 
of a commercial activity”, which most programmers and lawyers we spoke to 
believe is a very problematic wording. Many FOSS software projects are usually 
developed and maintained by a mix of volunteers, contractors, businesses or 
even incidental contributors participating in bug bounty hunts. 

—

Wikimedia is working on addressing the above mentioned weaknesses and trying to 
coordinate with organisations such a the Free Software Foundation Europe and 
Open Forum Europe on this. Our current thinking and suggestions can be seen 
here: [5]

 

===  Net Neutrality ===

The European Commission, under the lead of Commissioner Breton, has launched an 
“exploratory consultation” (i.e. not a regular consultation) on what they call 
“Fair Share”. [6] It is essentially an idea by the French Commissioner to have 
network operators charge data-heavy services, such as streaming platforms. The 
idea is, of course, not new and has been heavily discussed in the past under 
the banner “net neutrality”. 

—

While it seems the initiative won’t get the necessary traction to make it to an 
actual legislative proposal, we intend to participate in the consutlation. Our 
thinking and public positioning on the matter can be found in EN [7] and FR 
[8].  

 

=== Data Act ===

The Data Act is a regulation proposal that aims to boost data sharing 
in-between businesses and between businesses and governments. [9] It also wants 
to make it easier to switch between cloud services. As such it touches upon a 
myriad of data sharing issues, including the sui generis database right and 
data protection. 

—

The Council [10] and the Parliament [11] have written and agreed on their 
negotiating positions and are expected to start trilogues in the second half of 
March, when the parliamentary position is adopted in plenary.

—

Both houses agree with the Commission to de facto abolish the sui generis 
database right when it comes to machine-generated data. However, the European 
Parliament wording on Article 35 has fewer conditionalities attached to it, 
which is why we will reach out to negotiators to voice our preference for it. 

—

Another part of the text we are working on, together with EDRi, is Chapter V. 
It gives governments the right to request data from businesses in emergency 
situations. This is so vaguely framed that it might not even survive a legal 
challenge. The European Parliament added “no personal data” to the text, which 
is welcome, we continue to be worried about the lack of purpose limitation. 

 

=== EEN ===

A somewhat weird challenge to Wikipedia’s prominence on search engines and most 
importantly Google Search came from a group called the European Encyclopedia 
Network. [12] In a letter to Danish Commissioner Vestager [13] they claim that 
Wikimedia Enterprise is proof that Google is unfairly upranking Wikipedia. A 
logic we can’t really follow. 

—

Wikimedia Europe and Wikimedia Denmark have jointly written an open letter to 
Commissioner Vestager [14] offering collaboration on making encyclopaedia 
content more accessible and pointing out some criteria which we know influence 
search rankings. We have also written to the EEN offering to work together, as 
we believe we have much in common.

===

[1]https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1H89uABJZCg0BQlUdpDPE0XBpdtXWPGQbwLW4Ug_hmNo/edit#gid=1177757099

[2]https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Legal:EU_DSA_Userbase_Statistics

[3]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Four_accounting_firms

[4]https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/cyber-resilience-act

[5]https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GSO-WpA86vklStTIXpSJrqvppqQTyUfn90Q55EYq-hY/edit

[6]https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/consultations/future-electronic-communications-sector-and-its-infrastructure

[7]https://wikimedia.brussels/net-neutrality-the-fair-share-debate/

[8]https://www.wikimedia.fr/neutralite-du-net-et-partage-equitable-des-couts-le-mouvement-wikimedia-se-positionne/

[9]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Act_(European_Union)

[10]https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AtjIhK3dVqqgMyuHEuA0IzCCYoqvicLF/view?usp=share_link

[11]https://drive.google.com/file/d/1n4HyPr2epR_lOrPjJefU2JuLCF6Yys28/view

[12]https://encyclopedianetwork.eu/

[13]https://encyclopedianetwork.eu/sites/default/files/2023-02/Letter%20to%20the%20European%20Commission%201.02.2023.pdf

[14]https://wikimedia.brussels/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Open-letter-from-Wikimedia-to-Vestager-Cabinet.pdf

 


Wikimedia Europe ivzw

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