Government extends ECA Digital adaptation deadline to February

The Brazilian federal government has extended the deadline to February 13 for tech companies to submit adaptation measures to the ECA Digital, a law aimed at protecting children and adolescents online. The extension was announced by ANPD due to the complexity of legal requirements and the year-end holiday period. This initial phase monitors 37 companies, including giants like Google and Meta.

The ANPD (National Data Protection Agency) announced on Wednesday, January 7, 2026, an extension of the deadline for tech companies to submit documentation on their adaptations to the ECA Digital. Originally set for the end of January, the agency cited the complexity of the regulations and the year-end holidays as factors that could impact the quality of the submitted information.

"According to the agents consulted, such circumstances could compromise the quality and consistency of the information to be provided. Sensitive to the concerns raised, ANPD understood that postponing the deadline is a reasonable and proportional measure," the agency stated in a release.

The ECA Digital, enacted by Law No. 15.211/2025 and sanctioned in September 2025, updates the Child and Adolescent Statute for the digital environment. It imposes obligations on platforms, apps, games, and social networks, such as reliable age verification, parental supervision tools, and prompt responses to illegal or inappropriate content, including sexual exploitation, violence, and gambling.

This initial oversight phase aims to map initiatives from 37 companies offering products accessible to minors in Brazil, including Google Brazil, Amazon, Meta, TikTok, Spotify, Netflix, Discord, Snapchat, Roblox, Disney+, Globoplay, Apple Computer Brazil Ltda., Epic Games, Huawei do Brazil, Microsoft, Samsung, Sony Brazil Ltda., and others. Non-compliance penalties include fines up to 10% of revenue in the country, activity suspension, and, in extreme cases, operational bans.

The action underscores the government's commitment to enhancing child protection on the internet, aligning Brazil with global online safety standards for youth.

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President Lula signs decrees for the Digital Child and Adolescent Statute (ECA Digital) at Palácio do Planalto, emphasizing online protections for minors.
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Lula signs ECA Digital decrees this Tuesday

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President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signs decrees regulating the Digital Child and Adolescent Statute (ECA Digital) this Tuesday (March 17), a law entering into force that expands protections for minors online. The ceremony takes place at the Palácio do Planalto, featuring measures like age verification and bans on harmful content.

President Lula signed the ECA Digital decree on Wednesday (18), expanding protections for children and adolescents online. The measure restricts underage influencers and manipulative platform practices. ANPD will oversee compliance.

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TikTok began on Tuesday (17) making all accounts of users under 16 private, to comply with the ECA Digital. The change requires parental authorization for alterations and complements existing restrictions. The law takes effect today, but its decree was postponed.

호주와 스페인 등 국가들이 아동 대상 소셜미디어 금지를 추진하는 가운데, 필리핀도 청소년을 온라인 위험으로부터 보호하기 위해 유사한 제한을 고려 중이나 아직 결정은 나지 않았다.

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Developers from Ubuntu and Fedora have begun discussing how to comply with California's Digital Age Assurance Act, set to take effect in January 2027. The law requires operating systems to collect age information during account setup and provide an age signal to applications. Canonical and Fedora leaders emphasize ongoing reviews without firm plans yet.

The French National Assembly approved on January 26, 2026, a government-backed bill banning social media access for minors under 15 and prohibiting mobile phone use in high schools. Introduced by Renaissance deputy Laure Miller and accelerated by President Emmanuel Macron, the streamlined measure—focusing on parental controls for the riskiest platforms—aims to protect youth mental and physical health amid years of debate.

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The European Commission’s first report on the Digital Services Act, published Monday, describes the law as “content‑agnostic” and aligned with fundamental rights, while civil society groups and U.S. officials warn it could chill speech and burden American tech firms.

 

 

 

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