A key European Parliament committee agreed to a ban on dark patterns that trick web users. Also, they would like to ban advertisements targeting minors. The tougher regulation could spell trouble for tech giants in negotiations with any EU country.
Margrethe Vestager proposed the Digital Services Act to make big tech companies crack down on illegal content on their platforms. She is the European Commission antitrust chief. Therefore, based on that, the directive would result in fines of up to six percent of global turnover for not complying.
Still, Vestager’s proposal needs to be ironed out with EU countries lawmakers next year before it can become law. The first of its kind in the world, the proposal must be debated more thoroughly before it can become law. Last month, EU countries agreed on a common position that, in general, replicates the content of Vestager’s draft rules.
The committee also agreed to a ban on targeted ads for kids. So, the extensive and transparent rules require online platforms to reveal their algorithms and rules on pornography. This proposal came from Christel Schaldemose is proposing, a lawmaker steering the DSA trhough Parliament. Thus, she mentioned that algorithms should “play by the democratic rulebook,” and this is the purpose of the new rules.
So, EU lawmakers are taking action after the Facebook whistleblower, Frances Haugen, revealed the company’s disregard for its customers’ privacy. The new draft law will force Facebook to act in a transparent way and address many of the issues that Haugen brought up. According to the EU lawmaker Dita Charanzova, thus giants will have to remove illegal content. But they will also have to evaluate the harms their services bring for children and the general public.
On the other hand, Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google, which have their lobby grop – CCIA, called for a compromise during the January vote on the committee’s position. They “cautioned” that “further work is needed.”
In fact, a Californian judge decided to ban the use of dark patterns, still not all of them
Its digital advertising practices continue to bring troubles for Google. Two separate cases will go to court in the UK…
WPP, Delta Airlines, Kellogg and Mindshare take the issue of advertising discrimination seriously, in order to combat bias in digital…
Ad fraud has become a very big issue for both users and the advertising agencies. Different forms of it might…
The Facebook lead architect of the ad-based business model leaves the company. Let's see how her move could affect company's…
A new Meta privacy policy comes soon for the company's platforms. Users would be notified of the updates about how…
As its “customers don't like ads,” Evite, an American online party planner, decided to just close its advertising business, while…
View Comments