E.U. Law Threatens Free Speech, Online Groups Say
The E.U.’s Digital Services Act will encourage censorship around the world and even in the U.S.

Politicians who posture like totalitarian wannabes might well be giving us glimpses of their intentions. That brings us to European Union (E.U.) Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, who threatens to wield a law that goes into effect August 25 as a censorship tool. In response, digital organizations and civil liberties groups—some of which previously warned about the Digital Services Act's (DSA) far reach—demand "clarification" by Breton and ask E.U. authorities to exercise restraint in enforcement.
Censors and Not Afraid to Say So
"When there is hateful content, content that calls – for example – for revolt, that also calls for killing and burning of cars, they will be required to delete [the content] immediately," Breton commented earlier this month in a French radio interview, invoking the powers of the looming DSA. "If they don't act immediately, then yes, at that point we'll be able not only to impose a fine but also to ban the operation [of the platforms] on our territory."
Breton spoke in response to French President Emmanuel Macron's call for the power to censor the internet after weeks of rioting that he claimed was coordinated online.
"We have to think about the social networks, about the bans we'll have to put in place," Macron said on July 3. "When things get out of control, we might need to be able to regulate or cut them off."
Macron drew immediate criticism from opponents in France who compared his scheme to policies in such garden spots as China and Iran. But Breton was clearly on board with the idea. The EU official pointed to the DSA's measures for regulating "illegal content, online disinformation or other societal risks" as authorizing censorship not just in Macron's France, but across the E.U.'s member states.
This wasn't Breton's first venture into totalitarian posturing. In May he huffed "I am the enforcer. I represent the law, which is the will of the state and the people" with regard to forcing digital platforms, many based in the United States, to comply.
"You can run but you can't hide," he tweeted when Elon Musk pulled Twitter out of an agreement with the E.U. regarding so-called disinformation. "Beyond voluntary commitments, fighting disinformation will be legal obligation under #DSA as of August 25."
Anybody paying attention might understandably view the high-profile comments as a peek at how the law is to be enforced in the very near future.
Could You Clarify What You Mean by 'Ban'?
"These comments could reinforce the weaponisation of internet shutdowns, which includes arbitrary blocking of online platforms by governments around the world," 67 organizations protested in a July 26 letter responding to Breton's agreement with Macron about muzzling social media.
"Arbitrary blocking of online platforms and other forms of internet shutdowns are never a proportionate measure and impose disastrous consequences for people's safety," the letter continues. "The European Union fully recognises that internet shutdowns severely hinder the enjoyment of economic, social, and cultural rights, as well as civil and political rights. By no means should arbitrary blocking of Instagram, TikTok, or other social media platforms be viewed as a solution to any event or perceived crisis in a Member State or across the EU."
The signatory organizations, which include Article 19 and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, demand "clarification" of Breton's comments, as well as of whether the DSA would allow for shutting down online platforms. They also ask the European Commission to ensure that national governments, which enforce EU laws, don't interpret the legislation in an "overly broad" way.
Clarification? The Censors Have Been Pretty Clear.
The problem is that Breton has been very clear with each of his utterances. He's a thorough authoritarian, and comfortable with censorship. The signatory groups aren't really asking him for clarification; they want him to disavow his comments and the sentiments they represent. Even if he threw them a rhetorical bone, it would be worthless since he's revealed his contempt for free speech and his vision for the law's application.
As for national governments, France's President Macron openly states his desire for the ability to muzzle online speakers. He's no fan of unfettered speech and wants expanded authority to control internet content. The letter points to specific French legislation that would give Paris "an unprecedented government censorship tool." He's unlikely to be alone in his authoritarian inclinations.
And the European Commission can't honestly give assurances "that the DSA does not, in fact, provide for the possibility of shutting down online platforms as a sanction for failing to remove 'hateful content.'" Critics, some of whom signed the letter, have warned that the wide-ranging law threatens just that.
The DSA "gives way too much power to government agencies to flag and remove potentially illegal content and to uncover data about anonymous speakers," the Electronic Frontier Foundation warned a year ago as the legislation was taking final form.
"The Digital Services Act will essentially oblige Big Tech to act as a privatized censor on behalf of governments — censors who will enjoy wide discretion under vague and subjective standards," Jacob Mchangama, head of Justitia, a Danish think tank and signatory to the letter, cautioned in December 2022. "Add to this the EU's own laws banning Russian propaganda and plans to toughen EU-wide hate speech laws, and you have a wide-ranging, incoherent, multilevel censorship regime operating at scale."
Censorship Contagion
"With non-EU countries embracing DSA-like regulations, Breton's comments, without the requested clarification, threaten to reinforce the weaponization of internet shutdowns around the world, and give cover to governments using arbitrary blocking to shroud violence and serious human rights abuse," notes the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Copycat authoritarian legislation predates the DSA, so the new law is almost certain to encourage even more censorship emulating democratic (but not so free) Europe.
Even those of us in the land of the First Amendment are likely to be affected because it's easier for companies to inflict universal restrictions than to apply different rules in free and unfree jurisdictions.
"The European policies do not apply in the U.S., but given the size of the European market and the risk of legal liability, it will be tempting and financially wise for U.S.-based tech companies to skew their global content moderation policies even more toward a European approach to protect their bottom lines and streamline their global standards," according to Mchangama.
As the organizations signing this last-ditch letter know, nobody can claim they weren't warned about the DSA's potential dangers. Not only have civil liberties advocates pointed out the law's excessive reach, but European officials repeatedly telegraph their desire to wield it as a tool for censorship.
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Free speech is an American concept, it doesn't apply to the EU. They're all commie bastards to one extent or another. If they weren't, their ancestors would have fled to the US long ago. That's the thing about a nation of immigrants, only the brave risk-takers came here, the worthless chicken-shit weasels all stayed behind.
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Politics is cultural.
I don’t know, I think two world wars slaughtering millions of their best men could have something to do with it.
If we had a competent President, he'd inform the EU that their laws are not ever going to override ours and any attempt to do so will lead, directly, to us exiting the UN and NATO.
Nobody is overriding our laws. The EU says they will ban content they don't like. That means companies that don't want to be banned will have to make content comply with the law. Or they can tell the EU to get stuffed and see what happens when their customers complain to their government about being unable to go to their favorite web platforms. Either way it's not a job for the president.
Yeah, the job of the president is to get social media companies to censor Americans.
It won't be banning. It will be social media removing posts the EU doesn't like, and doing it "voluntarily" so they can keep showing ads in the EU. And it will be other companies policing their employees "voluntarily" so that they don't offend the EU. Stuff like that.
Holy fuck, we're already doing it with China! Hollywood self-censors it's movies, sports leagues already fire players for criticizing China. Etc. All without a single law requiring them to.
Soft-censorship doesn't need laws, it just needs people to meekly go along.
And it's not just the Left. Colin Kaepernick is was blackballed by his own league because Team Red got their panties in a twist, isn't that the same thing?
Colin Kaepernick got dropped because he was a shitty player.
he got kicked out of the slave plantation.
When has any of the major institutions done anything at the behest of the right?
If that were the case, Kaepernick would have been out years ago. Instead the left leaning NFL kept him around and only let him go for being shit when they were safe from drawing the ire of the leftists.
We might even exit the EU.
Gab has a competent CEO, Andrew Torba, who recently shared his interaction with some EU apparatchik where he told them to pound sand.
What on earth makes you think the vast majority of American politicians won't be only too happy to embrace this? Many of them may bleat about freedom of speech, but they're quick to start carving out exceptions. Leftards want to ban "hate speech". Right wingnuts want to ban "indoctrination". Everybody wants to ban "misinformation" and "foreign propaganda". Once you start allowing exceptions to the principle, it's only a matter of time until the exceptions swallow the principle whole.
Of course, the government should be able to control the news and opinions people see. What could possibly go wrong?
After all, we have always been at war with Eastasia.
Good thing there wasn’t an internet in 1776.
The king tried banning the printing press and often had his shock troops raid newspapers.
There was no internet in the sixties and everyone managed to riot anyway.
First there was the American Revolution that used flyers and pamphlets. Then there was the French Revolution. Good times!
Edit to add that looks like a good time to have another French Revolution. One can dream.
Not sure that's a good idea. Just look how the last one turned out.
So the EU is going to take over from Facebook and X and whatever is next.
Big deal.
If these so-called free speech companies were serious, they would just shut down all social media in the EU until the people threw out the fascists. And if the people don't throw them out, then censorship is what they want, and leave them to it.
The solution is clear: Elon Musk should immediately make Starlink available to all online platforms and users to broadcast content into every region of the world where threats of social media regulation are attempted. There has never in history been an example of successful censorship. For every government roadblock there are dozens of potential bypasses. For every government regulator there are dozens of corrupt officials looking for a handout to help satisfy demand. Radio Free Europe and Radio Merkur are recent examples.
I've long said that Musk would do better for both himself and everyone else if he devoted his time and resources to all-satellite-based Internet instead of talking of colonizing Mars.
All-satellite-based Internet would require the censors of the world to use missiles and "killer satellites" to implement their schemes, rendering censorship much more costly.
Also, all-satellite-based Internet is a goal easier to reach, and, when humans are finally ready to colonize the Moon and other Planets, the idea of all-satellite-based Internet can go wherever we humans go. Neat, ain't it?
"When there is hateful content, content that calls – for example – for revolt, that also calls for killing and burning of cars, they will be required to delete [the content] immediately,"
Unless it's endorsed by the DNC or The Squad.
"When things get out of control, we might need to be able to regulate or cut them off."
What if there's some kind of an emergency? Say for example, a pandemic originating in China sweeps across the globe. What should be done in this completely hypothetical situation if people post (dis)information that runs contrary to the government narrative?
> E.U. Law Threatens Free Speech
DeSantos is most jealous.
OK, groomer.
Don't be so judgmental, that's some pretty excellent comedy. We've been enduring a WWI bullet storm of censorship from the Democratic deep state establishment, and one soldier is worried about getting a splinter from a dodgy trench ladder.
I especially liked it when Desantos fought the Aztec mummy.
It would be a tragedy if Thierry Breton were set upon by miscreants who broke his arms and legs, and then he was raped to death by horses.
Hilarious, but definitely a tragedy.
And the punch line is: He couldn't call for help on his smart device.
Oh, the pity of it all!
🙂
So, their plan to control riots is to make it harder to communicate?
This is exactly why -- even before the revelations of US officials pressuring these companies -- that all the talk of "private companies" on this site was so blatantly asinine. That the EU does not have formal jurisdiction in the US does not actually change that the path of least resistance, if the US has no rules, is imposing EU censorship laws on Americans.
The easiest solution to these ideas is to cut them off.
You don't like Apple's design for IPhone - no worries, you won't get any.
You don't like Facebook - go make your own
You don't like Google - go make your own.
Oh, that's right. Between cradle to grave and coddling male immigrants of fighting age while they riot, Les Euros have no money to make their own Internet, especially if we cut them off.
They will have more les riotes when the spoiled immigrants are told we are out of Les Iphones, you have to have a flip phone.
Commissioner Thierry Breton: "We have free speech in the EU. Anyone can say whatever they want to say online as long as we approve of it!" (Not really - I just made that up.)