Hogan Lovells 2024 Election Impact and Congressional Outlook Report
Awaited with bated breath by stakeholders in the online industry and by IP right holders alike, the EU Commission today published its official draft for the Digital Services Act (DSA). The DSA is conceived as one of the central pillars for its ambition to shape Europe’s digital future. Its published draft aims high, both in the scope of topics it covers, and the depth in which it addresses them. The DSA provides a staggered set of obligations and liability rules for all intermediaries (such as internet access providers, domain name registrars, search engines), for hosting services (such as cloud services and webhosting), for online platforms (such as social media platforms, app stores and online marketplaces), and for very large online platforms (those reaching more than 45 million EU users each month). In this article, we will walk you through the proposed changes and what they mean for platforms in particular.
As reported in our previous article, the DSA, alongside the Digital Markets Act (DMA) is part of the EU Commission’s digital strategy aiming to reinforce the single market for digital services and to create a more level playing field for businesses of all sizes across the EU. To this end, the new DSA will build on the E-Commerce Directive, whose core provisions on the liability safe harbour for online intermediaries have over time witnessed diverging approaches across the Member States. The DSA, in its current draft form, will maintain the liability safe harbour but goes far beyond it, addressing the strong diversification of online services and business models in nuanced detail.
The DSA brings a comprehensive package of new rules for digital services providers around the following core areas of reform:
While some parts of this complex and ambitious package will certainly bring increased legal certainty and harmonization, other proposals already are subject to hot debate among different interest groups - and will continue to be hotly debated throughout the legislative process. The devil lies in the detail for many of the envisaged aspects of reform, in particular where they test the boundaries of what is technically manageable and financially reasonable for digital service providers, and for platform operators in particular. Some mechanisms, such as the envisaged Alternative Dispute Resolution system, may look better on paper than they will presumably work in practice.
It is early days, and we will sit on the edge of our seats, pens poised, as we accompany the DSA package on its way through the legislative process. In the next stage, the draft will now be discussed in, and between, the European Parliament and the European Council. It is safe to say that the draft will be subject to much controversial debate, given its strategic importance: the DSA is designed to be an ambitious all-encompassing framework for achieving an adequate balance of rights and interests of all parties involved in the exchange of content online. It will accordingly have significant legal and commercial implications for Europe’s digital future. We expect the debate to be all the more lively with regard to the expected interplay between the DSA and other recent EU legislation, the DSM Directive, the Omnibus Directive and the P2B Regulation, and how all these fairly new rules will complement each other in the market. At the same time, the UK has also announced its regulatory approach post-Brexit - see our related materials on the right for more on this topic.
The legislation will draw significant interest from a wide range of players, given the scope of services potentially affected and the fact the proposed rules are intended to cover any digital services, whether or not based in the EU, where activities or services are aimed at EU consumers.
We have a dedicated multi-jurisdictional taskforce closely tracking the progress of the DSA, including experts in intellectual property, consumer and contract laws, data protection, technology regulation and policy and competition. See related materials on the right for contact details or click here.