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The EU Commission and its official Communication on Online Platforms: is the e-commerce Directive being attacked by the back door? – Sophie Stalla-Bourdillon

As you might remember, a draft version of the European Commission’s Communication on Online Platforms and the Digital Single Market was leaked at the end of April. From digesting it at that time, it seemed to be clear that the Commission had taken the view that content regulation should be sectorial and the liability exemptions to be found in the e-commerce Directive (2000/31/EC) had to be preserved. [See my earlier post here].

Scroll forward a month, the official version of the Communication released on the 25 May 2016 is not really an exact copy of the leaked document. But is it simply a change of writing style or is it the case that the substance of the Communication has also changed? [Substance is usually said to be more durable than form…]

In particular, reading the Communication together with the proposal for a Directive amending the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AMSD), could it be that surreptitiously or indirectly, the domain or the effects of the liability exemptions to be found in the e-commerce Directive will progressively shrink?

Let’s start with the Communication itself:

What is the second principle? …Once again “responsible behaviour of online platforms to protect core values”. This is politician jargon but what does this really mean once translated into legalese? The following two paragraphs are crucial to understand what the European Commission has in mind:

  1. “The present liability regime for intermediary service providers, as set out in the e-Commerce Directive, was designed at a time when online platforms did not have the characteristics and scale they have today. However, it did create a technology-neutral regulatory environment that has considerably facilitated their scaling-up. This is in part due to the harmonisation of the exemption of certain types of online platforms from liability for illegal content and activities, in respect of which they have neither control nor knowledge. While certain concerns were raised on liability issues the consultation showed broad support for the existing principles of the e-Commerce Directive”.
  2. “Given this background, the Commission will maintain a balanced and predictable liability regime for online platforms. This is crucial for the further development of the digital economy in the EU and for unlocking investments in platform ecosystems. At the same time, a number of specific issues relating to illegal and harmful content and activities online have been identified that need to be addressed to render this approach sustainable”.

What do these two paragraphs mean? Is it the intention to reduce the domain [by excluding a certain number of actors from the list of intermediary providers] or to limit the effects of existing liability exemptions [by limiting the effects of Article 15]?  So, how could we make the liability regime [isn’t it a regime of liability exemptions?] ‘sustainable’? In 5 (3+2) ways argues the Commission:

But the story does not stop here (for good or bad, depending on one’s perspective on such matters) as the Communication on Online Platforms must be read together with the proposed amendments to the AMSD. What does one find in the proposal? Two things are important to note:

So in the end, is the e-commerce Directive’s shield really as bright and shiny as it once seemed [at least in the books]?

This post originally appeared on the Peep Beep! blog and is reproduced with permission and thanks

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