The European Commission is expected to unveil a new regulation that would force internet giants such as Facebook and Twitter to remove terrorist content within an hour in mid-September.
The new rules would be one of this administrations last shows of force on the digital front, and could be highlighted prominently in European Commission President Jean-Claude Junckers State of the European Union address on September 12, according to a Commission official.
As part of the proposed regulation, member countries would be asked to designate a national authority to determine what counts as terrorist content and to give notices to tech companies to remove the flagged content, according to two Commission officials. Tech companies would then have an hour to take the flagged content down.
If companies “systematically” fail to address these notices, they could face sanctions, the officials said.
Officials are still deciding what the sanctions should look like and how high they should be, but they could take a similar form to fines laid out in the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and in new consumer reforms.
As part of the GDPR, companies could face fines of up to 4 percent of global annual turnover for privacy offenses.
Companies would also have broad obligations to respond to flagged content by average users and consumers. However, flagged content from users will not be expected to be treated with the same urgency as content flagged by designated authorities.
Political importance
First Vice President Frans Timmermans is leading internal discussions on the subject, according to one of the officials.
The decision to allocate the file to Timmermans instead of Digital Vice President Andrus Ansip, Justice and Consumers Commissioner Věra Jourová or Digital Commissioner Mariya Gabriel showcases the political nature of the file and its importance to the upper echelons of the European Commission. Security Commissioner Julian King has also been an active participant in discussions surrounding the regulation.
Despite not being in the drivers seat, Ansip and Jourová scored a victory by ensuring the rules would remain very targeted and specific in nature. They resisted pressures from countries like France and from more hard-line officials to include other forms of illegal content, such as hate speech, in the scope of the regulation.
The nature of the regulation could, however, still change as officials and Commissioners are still negotiating the final details. Most commissioners return to work next week and are expected to hammer out the final compromises on the controversial legislation.
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