Saving the Internet in Europe: Defending Free Expression

Deeplinks 2024-12-19

Summary:

This post is part two in a series of posts about EFF’s work in Europe. Read about how and why we work in Europe here. 

EFF’s mission is to ensure that technology supports freedom, justice, and innovation for all people of the world. While our work has taken us to far corners of the globe, in recent years we have worked to expand our efforts in Europe, building up a policy team with key expertise in the region, and bringing our experience in advocacy and technology to the European fight for digital rights.

In this blog post series, we will introduce you to the various players involved in that fight, share how we work in Europe, and how what happens in Europe can affect digital rights across the globe. 

EFF’s approach to free speech

The global spread of Internet access and digital services promised a new era of freedom of expression, where everyone could share and access information, speak out and find an audience without relying on gatekeepers and make, tinker with and share creative works.  

Everyone should have the right to express themselves and share ideas freely. Various European countries have experienced totalitarian regimes and extensive censorship in the past century, and as a result, many Europeans still place special emphasis on privacy and freedom of expression. These values are enshrined in the European Convention of Human Rights and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union – essential legal frameworks for the protection of fundamental rights.  

Today, as so much of our speech is facilitated by online platforms, there is an expectation, that they too respect fundamental rights. Through their terms of services, community guidelines or house rules, platforms get to unilaterally define what speech is permissible on their services. The enforcement of these rules can be arbitrary, untransparent and selective, resulting in the suppression of contentious ideas and minority voices.  

That’s why EFF has been fighting against both government threats to free expression and to hold tech companies accountable for grounding their content moderation practices in robust human rights frameworks. That entails setting out clear rules and standards for internal processes such as notifications and explanations to users when terms of services are enforced or changed. In the European Union, we have worked for decades to ensure that laws governing online platforms respect fundamental rights, advocated against censorship and spoke up on behalf of human rights defenders. 

What’s the Digital Services Act and why do we keep talking about it? 

For the past years, we have been especially busy addressing human rights concerns with the drafting and implementation of the DSA the Digital Services Act (DSA), the new law setting out the rules for online services in the European Union. The DSA covers most online services, ranging from online marketplaces like Amazon, search engines like Google, social networks like Meta and app stores. However, not all of its rules apply to all services – instead, the DSA follows a risk-based approach that puts the most obligations on the largest services that have the highest impact on users. All service providers must ensure that their terms of services respect fundamental rights, that users can get in touch with them easily, and that they report on their content moderation activities. Additional rules apply to online platforms: they must give users detailed information about content moderation decisions and the right to appeal and additional transparency obligations. They also have to provide some basic transparency into the functioning of their recommender systems and are not allowed to target underage users with personalized ads. The most stringent obligations apply to the largest online platforms and search engines, which have more than 45 million users in the EU. These companies, which include X, TikTok, Amazon, Google Search and Play, YouTube, and several porn platforms, must proactively assess and mitigate systemic risks related to the design, functioning and use of their service their services. These include risks to the exercise of fundamental rights, elections, public safety, civic discourse, the protection of minors and public health. This novel approach might have merit but is also cause for concern: Systemic risks are barely defined and could lead to restrictions of lawful speech, and measures to address these risks,

Link:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/12/saving-internet-europe-defending-free-expression

From feeds:

Fair Use Tracker » Deeplinks
CLS / ROC » Deeplinks

Tags:

act

Authors:

Svea Windwehr

Date tagged:

12/19/2024, 14:16

Date published:

12/19/2024, 13:26