EFF and its partners in the Digital Services Act (DSA) Human Rights Alliance called on European Union (EU) regulators today to engage international civil society voices and forge a human rights centered approach in talks about the implementation and enforcement of the DSA, which sets out new responsibilities and rules for how platforms handle and make decisions about billions of users’ posts.
In a letter addressing the EU Commission, national DSA coordinators, and internet companies, the DSA Human Rights Alliance reminded the parties that the co-regulatory model of the DSA ensures that civil society organizations and digital rights defenders worldwide have a voice in EU state talks, allowing them to represent and advocate for the interests of users, including vulnerable groups who are frequently impacted by badly designed legislation affecting privacy, free expression, and other rights.
“For the DSA to constitute a positive framework aimed at protecting digital rights also beyond the EU, there must be human rights-centered implementation and enforcement of the text over the next few years, accompanied with proactive and meaningful engagement of international civil society voices,” the letter says. “The DSA HR Alliance has a critical role to play in this process.”
The Alliance, formed in 2022, works to ensure that the DSA embraces a human rights-centered approach to platform governance and that EU lawmakers consider the global impacts of European legislation. The DSA, which came into force last year, incorporated many Alliance recommendations concerning governance and platform accountability. But the DSA still features problematic aspects that can have negative consequences for vulnerable and historically oppressed groups. It gives a lot of power to government agencies and other parties with partisan interests to flag and remove potentially illegal content. It’s still not clear about how very large online platforms will mitigate risks in practice, while the role of civil society groups, researchers, and other stakeholders in the due diligence process has never been formalized.
So, now is an important time for regulators to reengage with Alliance members, as EU countries set up authorities to
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