Digital Services Act

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Illustration depicting EU officials presenting the Digital Services Act report in a conference room, contrasted with worried U.S. officials and free-speech advocates protesting in the background.
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EU defends Digital Services Act in first review as free-speech critics and U.S. officials raise alarms

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe Ti ṣayẹwo fun ododo

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.

Thirty European consumer organizations have reported TikTok, Meta and Google to the EU Commission for failing to protect users sufficiently from scam ads.

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Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has voiced concerns over the European Union's Digital Services Act, warning it could eliminate space for controversial digital ideas. In a recent social media post, he advocated for greater user empowerment instead. This comes amid a surge in privacy-focused cryptocurrencies in 2025.

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