Hello!

As we are bracing for the hearings of the designated Commissioners in the
coming weeks, we are also keeping tabs on what seem to be the hot topics of
the season: Copyright & AI on one hand, and child protection & age
verification on the other.

Dimi & Michele

=== Considering Copyright & AI ===

We already teased this last month. It is a hot and versatile issue. How can
data be used for AI training under the EU’s text and data mining
exceptions? How can publishers who want to opt-out of this exception
technically do it? Are AI models respecting the rules? When is the
threshold for the protection of generated content crossed?

—

As the hearings are approaching, we are getting more insight into the
Commission's thinking. The new “digital supermo”, Finnish
Commissioner-designate Henna Virkkunen has answered written questions
<https://hearings.elections.europa.eu/documents/virkkunen/virkkunen_writtenquestionsandanswers_en.pdf>
from lawmakers. Virkunnen says she won’t rule out reopening the EU’s
copyright laws to tackle challenges posted by artificial intelligence. But
she insists that “licensing and mediation mechanisms” should be tried to
facilitate the relationship between creative industries and AI companies.

—

Meanwhile the EU AI Office gathered general-purpose AI model providers for
a dedicated workshop
<https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/first-workshop-general-purpose-ai-model-providers-code-practice-drafting-process>
where copyright has quickly become one of the two main topics, next to risk
mitigation.

—

Our analysis is that the EU is unlikely to steam towards a copyright or AI
Act reform this legislative period. But there will be various initiatives
targeted at pushing licencing deals. There have also been claims that some
large language AI models don’t respect the technical opt-out mchanism
<https://academic.oup.com/jiplp/article/19/5/453/7614898?login=false>
provided for in the EU’s text and data mining exception. The EU will try to
fix this, possibly through technical specifications.

=== Age-Verification & Child Protection ===

This is the second boiling pot of tech-related policy frenzy. Even
Virkkunen stated, in the above linked written Q&A, that she wants to focus
on “protection of minors online” as her number one priority when it comes
to Digital Services Act enforcement.

—

The European Parliament doesn’t have the power to initiate legislation, so
while the Commission makes up its mind, all it can do is own-initiative
reports and hearings. To little surprise, the powerful Internal Market and
Consumer Protection committee (IMCO) has decided to write a report on “the
protection of minors online”.

—

Member States are not sitting idly by. After Spain, Germany, France, Sweden
and Denmark have raised the topics in various ways (see past editions of
this newsletter), now it’s the turn of the Netherlands and Italy.

—

The lower chamber of the Dutch parliament passed a motion that requests its
government to “legally secure privacy-friendly and reliable age
verification for online gambling and websites with pornographic content".

—

The Italian Authority for Communications (AGCOM) announced
<https://igamingexpress.com/italys-agcom-enforces-mandatory-age-verification-for-adult-content/>
that it wants to introduce age-verification systems for various platforms.

—

Our comment is that there are valid reasons and cases where governments
need to address child protection, including through age-verification. The
sale of alcohol and online financial credits being two very obvious
examples. Still, age-verification is not always the only and best way to
protect children across all online spaces. It comes with drawbacks such as
more personal data being gathered and limiting access. The Digital Services
Act seems  to recognise that balance. It seems to suggest that different
approaches are needed for different types of services. Something we can
agree with.

=== Commissioner Hearings ===

The hearings of all the Commissioners are scheduled for 4-12 November. You
may see details and watch online, there’s a dedicated page
<https://elections.europa.eu/european-commission/en/programme/> now.

—

For us the most important hearing will be that of Finnish Henna Virkkunen.
We will also listen to Irish Michael McGrath (who will oversee fundamental
rights) and Maltese Glenn Micaleff (culture).

—

If everything goes as planned, the new Commission will start its regular
work on 1 December.

=== Geo-Blocking Consultation ===

A quick heads-up: the European Commission plans to open a call for evidence
and public consultation to support its evaluation of the 2018 Geo-blocking
Regulation. The public consultation
<https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-regulation/have-your-say/initiatives/14416-Evaluation-of-the-Geo-blocking-Regulation_en>
is currently listed as planned for the 2nd quarter of 2025.

==== From the Blog ====

   -

   Wikimedia Europe Partners for Research into Wikipedia’s Practices on
   Information on Elections
   
<https://wikimedia.brussels/wikimedia-europe-partners-for-research-into-wikipedias-practices-on-information-on-elections/>
   -

   Prepped to the nines: Wikimedians gathered in Brussels to prepare for
   public policy advocacy challenges
   
<https://wikimedia.brussels/prepped-to-the-nines-wikimedians-gathered-in-brussels-to-prepare-for-public-policy-advocacy-challenges/>


===END===

-- 
Wikimedia Europe ivzw
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