Putting the DSA into Practice: Enforcement, Access to Justice and Global Implications external link

Verfassungsbooks, 2023, ISBN: 9783757517960

Abstract

The Digital Services Act was finally published in the Official Journal of the European Union on 27 October 2022. This publication marks the end of a years-long drafting and negotiation process, and opens a new chapter: that of its enforcement, practicable access to justice, and potential to set global precedents. The Act has been portrayed as Europe’s new „Digital Constitution“, which affirms the primacy of democratic rulemaking over the private transnational ordering mechanisms of Big Tech. With it, the European Union aims once again to set a global standard in the regulation of the digital environment. But will the Digital Services Act be able to live up to its expectations, and under what conditions?

big tech, Digital Services Act (DSA), enforcement

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Using Terms and Conditions to Apply Fundamental Rights to Content Moderation external link

German Law Journal (forthcoming), 2022

Abstract

Large online platforms provide an unprecedented means for exercising freedom of expression online and wield enormous power over public participation in the online democratic space. However, it is increasingly clear that their systems, where (automated) content moderation decisions are taken based on a platform's terms and conditions (T&Cs), are fundamentally broken. Content moderation systems have been said to undermine freedom of expression, especially where important public interest speech ends up suppressed, such as speech by minority and marginalized groups. Indeed, these content moderation systems have been criticized for their overly vague rules of operation, inconsistent enforcement, and an overdependence on automation. Therefore, in order to better protect freedom of expression online, international human rights bodies and civil society organizations have argued that platforms “should incorporate directly” principles of fundamental rights law into their T&Cs. Under EU law, and apart from a rule in the Terrorist Content Regulation, platforms had until recently no explicit obligation to incorporate fundamental rights into their T&Cs. However, an important provision in the Digital Services Act (DSA) will change this. Crucially, Article 14 DSA lays down new rules on how platforms can enforce their T&Cs, including that platforms must have “due regard” to the “fundamental rights” of users under the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. In this article, we critically examine the topic of enforceability of fundamental rights via T&Cs through the prism of Article 14 DSA. We ask whether this provision requires platforms to apply EU fundamental rights law and to what extent this may curb the power of Big Tech over online speech. We conclude that Article 14 will make it possible, in principle, to establish the indirect horizontal effect of fundamental rights in the relationship between online platforms and their users. But in order for the application and enforcement of T&Cs to take due regard of fundamental rights, Article 14 must be operationalized within the framework of the international and European fundamental rights standards, and therefore allowing Article 14 to fulfil its revolutionary potential.

Content moderation, Digital Services Act (DSA), Freedom of expression, Online platforms, platform regulation, terms and conditions

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European Copyright Society – Comment on Copyright and the Digital Services Act Proposal external link

Peukert, A., Husovec, M., Kretschmer, M., Mezei, P. & Quintais, J.
IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law , vol. 53, iss. : 3, pp: 358-376, 2022

Auteursrecht, Digital Services Act (DSA), european copyright society, frontpage

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European Copyright Society (ECS): Comment on Copyright and the Digital Services Act Proposal external link

Peukert, A., Husovec, M., Kretschmer, M., Mezei, P. & Quintais, J.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2022

Auteursrecht, Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage

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From Risk to Reward? The DSA’s risk-based approach to disinformation external link

Pentney, K. & McGonagle, T.
Unravelling the Digital Services Act package', M. Cappello (ed.), IRIS Special, Strasbourg: European Audiovisual Observatory, 1028, pp: 40-57

desinformatie, Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage, Mediarecht

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Using Terms and Conditions to apply Fundamental Rights to Content Moderation: Is Article 12 DSA a Paper Tiger? external link

Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage, Fundamental rights, Online platforms, terms and conditions

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Platform ad archives in Article 30 DSA external link

DSA Observatory blog, 2021

Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage, Platforms

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Regulation of news recommenders in the Digital Services Act: empowering David against the Very Large Online Goliath external link

Helberger, N., Drunen, M. van, Vrijenhoek, S. & Möller, J.
Internet Policy Review, 2021

Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage, Mediarecht, news recommenders, Regulering

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Article 12 DSA: Will platforms be required to apply EU fundamental rights in content moderation decisions? external link

Content moderation, Digital Services Act (DSA), frontpage, Fundamental rights

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