With
the upcoming Digital Services Act (DSA), the EU aims to shape the
digital economy not only at European Union level but also to be a
standard-setter for the rest of the world, as it did with data
protection.
In a “legislative initiative” report approved in the Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee,
MEPs request that the Commission addresses and tackles current
shortcomings in the online environment in its DSA package, due to be
presented by the end of the year. The principle of “what is illegal
offline is also illegal online”, as well as the principles of consumer
protection and user safety, should become “guiding principles” of the
future DSA, they say.
The committee recommendations touch upon
a wide range of issues, including obligations related to transparency
and information for online marketplaces, product safety online,
effective enforcement and supervision measures, including fines, the
spread of illegal content online, artificial intelligence (AI), and ex-ante regulation to prevent (instead of merely remedy) market failures caused by big platforms.
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The Internal Market Committee rapporteur on the DSA, Alex Agius Saliba
(S&D, MT), said: “We live in a digital world where digital services
have become the new utilities of our time. Their importance for our
lives will only continue to grow. The report we voted on today
recognises that a unique holistic, common approach built on trust,
choice, and a high level of protection fully integrating users',
consumers', and SMEs' concerns is needed”.
“For the first time, we are introducing at EU level new concepts, such as Know your Business Customer, ex-ante
rules for the digital sectors, special responsibilities for online
marketplaces to guarantee consumer safety, stricter rules on targeted
advertising and AI mechanisms and a scope that will encompass companies
established even outside the EU”, Mr Saliba highlighted.
Key demands
What should be covered: The EU legal framework for digital services - the e-commerce directive
- was adopted 20 years ago; it therefore needs to be updated to reflect
the rapid digital transformation. A “one-size-fits-all” approach
should, however, be avoided. The committee recommends distinguishing
between economic and non-economic activities, and between “different
type of digital services hosted by platforms rather than focusing on the
type of the platform”. All digital service providers established in
third countries must adhere to the rules of the DSA when directing their
services to consumers or users in the EU, MEPs say.
Illegal, counterfeit and unsafe products:
Consumers should be equally safe when shopping online or in stores.
Platforms and online intermediation services will need to improve their
efforts to detect and take down false claims and tackle rogue traders,
e.g. those selling false medical equipment or dangerous products online,
as was the case during the COVID-19 outbreak. Consumers should also be
promptly informed by online marketplaces once a non-compliant product
they have purchased has been removed from their site.
Notice-and-action mechanism:
An effective and legally enforceable notice-and-action mechanism must
be set up so that users can notify online intermediaries about
potentially illegal online content or activities and to help the latter
to react quickly and be more transparent regarding the actions taken on
potentially illegal content.
The new rules should preserve the
underlying legal principle that passive online intermediaries should not
be held directly liable for the actions of their users.
Distinction between illegal and harmful content:
MEPs call for a strict distinction to be made between illegal content,
punishable acts and illegally shared content on the one hand, and
harmful content on the other (the legal liability regime should concern
“illegal content” only as defined in EU or national law). Harmful
content, hate speech and disinformation should be addressed through
enhanced transparency obligations and by helping citizens to acquire
media and digital literacy regarding dissemination of such content.
Know your Business Customer: The
so-called "Know your business customer" principle will require
platforms to check and stop fraudulent companies using their services to
sell their illegal and unsafe products and content. “Such a measure
will help address one part of the problem with disinformation,
misleading, or illegal content, and the sale of unsafe and fake products
online”, says the rapporteur.
AI-driven services: The
DSA should guarantee the consumer’s right to be informed if a service
is enabled by AI, makes use of automated decision-making or machine
learning tools or automated content recognition tools, as well as their
right to redress. They should be able to opt out and be given more
control of the way content is ranked. MEPs also call for rules to ensure
non-discrimination and understandable explanation of algorithms.
Online advertising, profiling, and personalised pricing:
MEPs want the Commission to introduce additional rules on targeted
advertising and micro-targeting based on the collection of personal data
and to consider regulating micro- and behavioural targeted advertising
more strictly in favour of less intrusive forms of advertising that do
not require extensive tracking of user interaction with content.
Specific ex-ante rules for big platforms, “gatekeepers” of market access:
Apart from a revision of the current e-commerce directive, the DSA
package should also include a separate proposal for an internal market
instrument imposing ex-ante obligations on large platforms with
a gatekeeper role (“systemic operators”). The aim would be to prevent
(instead of merely remedy) market failures caused by them and open up
markets to new entrants, including SMEs, entrepreneurs, and start-ups.
For more details on these and other recommendations, see the compromise amendments approved in the committee.
Next steps
The vote in plenary is expected to take
place during the 19-22 October plenary session. This “legislative
initiative” report will then be sent to the Commission to feed into its
Digital Services Act package, to be tabled before the end of the year.