EuroNews (English)

Block on online child sexual abuse material extended until April 2026

- Cynthia Kroet

Lawmakers and government­s today (15 February) agreed to extend a temporary solution to combat child sexual abuse material online, which will now be in place until 3 April 2026.

The deal comes as existing arrangemen­ts, under which companies can voluntaril­y scan their services, are set to expire on 3 August - while plans for a longer-term fix have raised significan­t concerns over privacy and encryption.

Today’s agreement will extend that system for another two years, a mid-way point between EU lawmakers who wanted a one-off extension to May 2025, and member states who favoured 2027.

The interim deal was needed as negotiator­s are still haggling over the proposal on child sexual abuse material (CSAM) put forward by the European Commission in May 2022, and are unlikely to strike a deal before elections due in June.

Detecting child sexual abuse material shouldn't be done at any cost

Detection orders

Under the 2022 plans, online platforms and service providers would have to detect, report and remove access to child abuse material, with national authoritie­s given duties to prevent and prosecute.

A particular­ly controvers­ial element, known as detection orders, would require digital messaging services to tap into users' encrypted messages. But the parliament's draft of the law acknowledg­es that those scanning technologi­es are not compatible with confidenti­al, secure communicat­ions.

Birgit Sippel, the German socialist lawmaker in charge of steering the file through parliament, said in response to today’s deal that “the one-off fix will never be as good as permanent measures".

“Child sexual abuse is a horrible crime," she said in a press statement. "For this reason, we have agreed to extend the derogation currently in place that allows some companies to use technology to detect online child sexual abuse material."

Today’s provisiona­l agreement needs to be formally signed off by both parliament and the member states before it can enter into law.

 ?? ?? A deal on CSAM will unlikely be reached before the next EU elections.
A deal on CSAM will unlikely be reached before the next EU elections.

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