EU Parliament blocks renewal of legal basis for scanning private messages for child abuse

Change
The EU Parliament refused to renew a temporary exemption on 3 April, removing the legal basis that had allowed platforms to run automated scans of private communications for child sexual abuse, while Digital Services Act obligations to remove illegal content remain in force.
Why it matters
Platforms lose the legal cover that enabled automated detection inside private messaging. This forces an immediate shift in how abuse is identified — from proactive scanning to either legally uncertain methods or reactive reporting — increasing compliance risk while reducing detection visibility.
EU Parliament blocks renewal of legal basis for scanning private messages for child abuse
Implications
  • Platform safety and engineering teams must suspend automated scanning of private messages unless a new legal basis is established — continuing exposes them to EU privacy enforcement.

Unlock the decision layer.

Know what changes, what’s at risk, and what needs action next.

  • Implications: What shifts in cost, supply, or compliance.
  • Who is affected: Which teams, contracts, or flows are exposed.
  • What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and when action becomes necessary.
  • Real-time alerts: Get notified when a change becomes actionable — not noise..
  • Ask AI: Go deeper on any change in seconds.

No credit card · 14-day trial · Active in seconds

Unlock the decision layer
Source

The Guardian

Topics

Governance Human Rights Data Privacy

Stay updated

Don’t check for changes.
Get them as they happen.

Real-time alerts on binding changes, a daily brief of what matters, and a weekly reset — without the noise.

No credit card· 14-day trial· Active in seconds