
EU Commission to look at improving platform disputes at industry's request
The European Commission has said it will consider concerns of appeals bodies which gather complaints from users about content removal or moderation of Facebook, TikTok and YouTube, after they called for better cooperation with online platforms under the EU's online platform rules.
Minutes made public from a meeting last week with Werner Stengg, a cabinet member of EU Technology Commissioner Henna Virkkunen, show that a group of eight appeals bodies called for a meeting to present initial experiences with reviewing content moderation decisions under the Digital Services Act (DSA).
The DSA, which became applicable to the largest online platforms in August 2023, allows for so-called out-of-court dispute settlement bodies to provide an alternative to often costly and time-consuming legal routes to redress and reduce the burden on regulators and courts.
Euronews reported in October that the first such bodies in Germany and Malta began ruling on the first social media appeal cases. They have received complaints from users – mostly of Instagram, TikTok and LinkedIn – whose social media posts have been deleted or moderated by platforms under German law and violations of platform terms and conditions.
Slow response times
In their meeting with the Commission official, ADROIT, Appeals Centre Europe, Central European Appeals Hub and IMPRESS, said platforms should make it easier for users to know about the out-of-court dispute settlements.
'The slow response times and lack of contact points for some online platforms impede the [appeal] bodies' ability to conclude their procedures within the legal deadlines,' the entities said in the meeting.
'The attendees stressed that the challenges they face have varying urgencies. While the harmonisation of some very limited areas might be useful in the future, other areas require a faster response,' according to the notes.
The Commission said it will follow up on the issues in technical meetings. Although enforcement of the largest platforms under the DSA, including social media companies Facebook, LinkedIn, but also retailers Shein and Temu, is carried out by the Commission, smaller platforms are the responsibility of the member states.
Not every EU country has designated a regulator yet. Belgium was the last to officially approve its telecom regulator as the Digital Services Coordinator earlier this month.
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AFP
3 hours ago
- AFP
Flyer does not prove assisted death legal for minors in Canada
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Initially, a person's natural death had to be "reasonably foreseeable" to be granted the procedure, but updates in 2021 opened eligibility to people whose deaths were not immediately imminent (archived here). False and misleading claims about MAID in Canada frequently surface online, often the program is being opened up to children. In 2023, a parliamentary committee did recommend that mature minors should be given the right to choose MAID. But as of June 3, 2025, people under 18 years old have never been eligible for the procedure in Canada. "The eligibility criteria set out in the Criminal Code require that a person must be a minimum of 18 years of age and capable of making decisions with respect to their health," said Mark Johnson, spokesman for Health Canada. "The Government of Canada is not considering any legislative changes to this requirement that minors cannot be assessed for nor receive MAID." 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Media have previously reported on applicants seeking medically assisted death for social reasons including isolation, and practitioners struggling with requests for MAID from people living with disabilities or difficult economic situations. Offering MAID as an option for people suffering solely from a mental illness was slated to go into effect in 2024, but this change was postponed until at least March 2027 (archived here). Read more of AFP's reporting on misinformation in Canada here.


Euronews
6 hours ago
- Euronews
Meloni meets Macron and Fico in Rome with Ukraine war topping agenda
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Fico is a divisive figure at home with his critics accusing him of being pro-Russia. In January, Fico threatened to cut financial aid for more than 130,000 Ukrainian refugees living in the country as part of a set of retaliatory measures against Kyiv over its decision to halt the flow of Russian gas through its territory to Slovakia. He has also said that Ukraine will never be allowed to join NATO, stopped military aid to Ukraine and criticised EU sanctions on Russia, all views which are largely at odds with the European mainstream. Fico and Meloni "discussed their support for a just and lasting peace in Ukraine and their commitment to the reconstruction of the country in view of the Ukraine Recovery Conference that Italy will host in July 2025," a joint government statement said. Later on Tuesday, Meloni welcomes France's President Emmanuel Macron to the Chigi Palace for talks which covered Ukraine, Gaza and relations with the European Union and the Trump administration. 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France 24
7 hours ago
- France 24
Rivals Meloni and Macron seek to mend fences in Rome talks
The far-right prime minister welcomed the centrist French president to her Palazzo Chigi office, the pair kissing lightly on the cheek and both smiling. A guard of honour played both national anthems before the two European rivals headed inside for talks and a dinner, with no plans to speak to the press. They are not natural political allies, but as the leaders of the EU's second- and third-largest economies, they are both grappling with the fall-out from the war in Ukraine, as well as US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs against the bloc. Meloni on Friday acknowledged "divergences" with Macron but denied she had any "personal problems" with him, and said she was "very happy" with the visit. An Italian government source said Rome and Paris hoped to "lay the foundations for a further strengthening of relations" between two nations "on the front line of the various fronts of international politics". Macron's office said Italy was "an important partner" with "a crucial role to play in European decisions", particularly in the Ukrainian conflict. Despite their political rivalry, the French presidency said the two leaders were showing they were "capable of moving forward together on the essentials". 'Undeniable rivalry' Their cooperation has been sorely tested by Trump, with the pair disagreeing over how to deal with the US president on both tariffs and Ukraine. Meloni and Macron have and "undeniable rivalry", said Marc Lazar, a professor at Sciences Po university in Paris. He said the pair were following different strategies with Meloni seeking "mediation and compromise" with the US president and Macron favouring "unwavering firmness". Rome "believes that because it is ideologically close to the US administration... it will be able to force it to back down on trade tariffs", he told AFP. But while Paris says it has "respect" for those who can "maintain the best possible relationship with President Trump", it insists trade negotiations are the responsibility of the European Commission -- effectively sidelining Meloni as a would-be mediator. On Ukraine, Macron presents himself as the EU's go-to man on the issue, speaking to Trump regularly and invoking the relationship developed during the billionaire's first term. And he has seriously ruffled feathers in Rome with his attempts to put together a "coalition of the willing" ready to provide "security guarantees" to Ukraine. In recent weeks, the French president's meetings on the Russian invasion with the British, German and Polish leaders -- but without Meloni -- have ratcheted up tensions. Paris says that "between Europeans, the issue of formats must be arranged to achieve the best impact we can under the circumstances". It says that Italy has always insisted the US take part. But Lazar notes that as a nuclear power with a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, France sees itself as less dependent on the United States. The mood was not helped when an adviser to Macron dismissed Italy's proposal to grant Ukraine protection under Article 5 of the NATO treaty without Kyiv joining the military alliance itself. The article stipulates that if one member is attacked all the others must act as if they too were attacked. While that idea "deserves discussion", it would in practice be very hard to implement, Lazar said, not least "because if the Trump administration refuses Ukraine's accession, it is precisely because it does not want to implement Article 5 for Ukraine's benefit".