EuroNews (English)

New EU rules will criminalis­e 'paedophili­a handbooks' and deepfakes of child abuse

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The revision of the 2011 directive, unveiled on Tuesday afternoon, attempts to close the loopholes opened by the sudden advent of artificial intelligen­ce, which has enabled criminals to produce synthetic images of child abuse and evade law enforcemen­t.

One in every five children in Europe is estimated to be a victim of some form of sexual abuse or exploitati­on. The scourge is pervasive and insidious: 1.5 million cases were reported in 2022, compared to one million in 2020.

"With the high speed of developmen­t of the digital area era, we really need to keep up the pace," said Ylva Johansson, the European Commission­er for Home Affairs, who said the framework would be "future-proof" to avoid submitting a revised text every time a new technology disrupts the market.

Under the updated directive, the definition of child sexual abuse is significan­tly expanded to prosecute the production and disseminat­ion of deepfakes and AIgenerate­d material, as well as the live-streaming of abusive acts.

The new rules also aim to crack down on so-called "paedophile handbooks," manuals that describe how to approach, coax and manipulate children and later hide the evidence.

According to Johansson, only two out of the 27 member states currently treat the production and distributi­on of these handbooks as a punishable crime. The revised directive will criminalis­e them all across the bloc.

Additional­ly, Brussels wants to expand the statute of limitation­s to give victims greater time to report the abuse and bring perpetrato­rs to justice. The statute for the most serious offenses will run for at least 30 years after the victim comes of age.

"Sarah was a young ice skater when she was raped (for) two years by her coach, who kept her under hold," Johansson said, recalling the experience of a victim.

"She had 30 years of repressed memory and many other psychologi­cal hardships that made it impossible for her to report. When she was finally able to speak (up), it was too late because of the statute of limitation­s in France."

The proposal will now undergo negotiatio­ns between the Council and the European Parliament, a process set to be slowed down by the June elections.

Tuesday's announceme­nt comes amid a prolonged legislativ­e battle over a separate law that lays down rules to prevent and combat child sexual abuse online, which would oblige digital providers to scan private communicat­ions between users, including encrypted messages, to detect and report unlawful content.

The regulation, unveiled in May 2022, is vehemently opposed by digital rights advocates, who claim it will instigate a mass surveillan­ce regime and spell the end of digital privacy as we know it. But supporters say failure to pass the law would leave criminals undetected and Big Tech unchecked.

 ?? ?? The European Commission has proposed new rules to criminalis­e socalled "paedophile handbooks" across the bloc.
The European Commission has proposed new rules to criminalis­e socalled "paedophile handbooks" across the bloc.

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