Hello!

Traditionally we don’t send out a monitoring report at the end of December.
However, with the DSA, child protection, copyright and AI, plenty has piled
up. So we decided to give you an update, in order to start 2025 with clear
structure in our heads.

Dimi & Michele

=== DSA ===

Consultation: Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs) are supposed to give
researchers access to their data under Europe’s content moderation law
(Digital Services Act, DSA). The European Commission will issue additional
rules
<https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-regulation/have-your-say/initiatives/13817-Delegated-Regulation-on-data-access-provided-for-in-the-Digital-Services-Act_en>
and is currently consulting on them. Naturally civil society and academics
worry VLOPs will be too  restrictive, while platforms worry about extra
work and data protection. The Wikimedia Foundation’s reply is published
<https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-regulation/have-your-say/initiatives/13817-Delegated-Regulation-on-data-access-provided-for-in-the-Digital-Services-Act/F3498877_en>
.

—

Challenges: Six platforms are challenging the Commission’s decision
designating them as “very large”: Pornhub, XNXX, Stripchat, XVideos and
Zalando.

—

Proceedings: As a regulator, the Commission has open proceedings against
TikTok, X, AliExpress, Facebook, Instagram and Temu. The challenges are
regarding advertising, dark patterns, illegal content and protection of
minors. [Data compiled by Euractiv.
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/tech/news/dsa-audit-score-card-how-are-big-tech-platforms-complying-with-the-eus-landmark-legislation/>
]

=== Child Protection ===

CSAM in Council: The Hungarian Presidency forced governments in the Council
to reveal their position on the proposed CSAM
<https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex:52022PC0209>
regulation. The main argument is around a provision that mandates the
scanning of all private chats for CSA materials. The results are that
Austria, Germany, Slovenia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Czechia, Poland,
Estonia, Finland and Belgium would be against, mainly citing that it would
amount to surveillance.

=== Copyright ===

Opt-out exceptions: The Copyright Directive allows AI crawlers to tap into
any publicly accessible content, as long as the rights holders have not
opted out (through a technical mechanism that is currently being reviewed).
However this doesn’t always seem to work smoothly. The French tech lobby
now suggests <https://www.francedigitale.org/en/posts/gen-ai-and-copyright>
dropping the opt-out mechanism in the text and data mining exception and
moving to an extended licensing scheme.

—

UK Consultation: The UK government has opened a consultation on copyright
and artificial intelligence
<https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/copyright-and-artificial-intelligence>.
WMUK will participate.

==== AI Liability Directive ====

The AI Liability Directive
<https://commission.europa.eu/business-economy-euro/doing-business-eu/contract-rules/digital-contracts/liability-rules-artificial-intelligence_en>
was proposed back in 2022, but lawmakers decided to hold off on it while
the AI Act was getting hammered out. It would aim to close some gaps not
covered by other laws. Now the question is whether to proceed at all. The
European Commission and parts of the EU Parliament, including Axel Voss (DE
EPP) who claims he was less regulation for companies, want to proceed.
Other parts of the European Parliament (including other German EPP members)
and the Council are against. The first months of 2025 will be decisive to
see if this gets off the ground.

==== From the Blog ====

   -

   Deep Dive: The New von der Leyen Commission
   <https://wikimedia.brussels/deep-dive-the-new-von-der-leyen-commission/>
   -

   The worrisome phenomenon of SLAPPs in Europe: the new 2024 CASE Report
   
<https://wikimedia.brussels/the-worrisome-phenomenon-of-slapps-in-europe-the-new-2024-case-report/>


===END===

-- 
Wikimedia Europe ivzw
_______________________________________________
Publicpolicy mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to