European Parliament advances child safety privacy balance

The European Parliament has adopted amendments to a temporary exemption from the EU’s ePrivacy rules, seeking to preserve voluntary detection of child sexual abuse material while strengthening protections for end-to-end encrypted communications.

MEPs voted to exclude communications protected by end-to-end encryption from the scope of the temporary derogation, reinforcing privacy protections while maintaining support for voluntary detection measures.

The amendments were adopted during Parliament’s second reading of the proposal. Although a simple majority initially voted to reject the Council’s position, the motion failed because it did not reach the required absolute majority of 360 votes. Parliament therefore proceeded to adopt amendments instead.

The amended text now returns to the Council, which has three months to approve or reject Parliament’s changes. If the Council does not accept all of the amendments, the proposal will move to conciliation negotiations.

The temporary derogation is intended to prevent a legal gap following the expiry of the previous exemption in April 2026. It allows electronic communications providers to continue voluntarily detecting, removing and reporting child sexual abuse material while EU institutions negotiate a permanent legal framework.

Earlier negotiations between the European Parliament and the Council failed to produce an agreement, allowing the previous temporary framework to expire before the proposal returned for a second reading.

At the same time, Parliament and the Council continue negotiations on a permanent legislative framework to combat child sexual abuse online. Most elements have already been agreed, with discussions continuing on issues such as the balance between child protection and fundamental rights, including privacy and secure communications.

Why does it matter?

The vote highlights the EU’s continuing effort to balance child protection with fundamental rights. By excluding end-to-end encrypted communications from the temporary derogation, Parliament is signalling that stronger safeguards against child sexual abuse should not come at the expense of weakening secure communications.

The decision also keeps voluntary detection measures in place while negotiations continue on a permanent framework. The outcome of those talks is likely to shape how the EU reconciles online safety, privacy and encryption in future digital regulation.

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Ofcom fines adult platform over Online Safety Act age check failures

The UK communications regulator, Ofcom, has fined the operator of Fapello.com £630,000 for breaching the Online Safety Act, marking one of its most significant enforcement actions under the new regime.

The penalty includes £600,000 for failing to implement legally required age assurance measures to prevent children from accessing pornographic content, and a further £30,000 for failing to comply with a legally binding information request. Following Ofcom’s action, Fapello.com geoblocked users in the UK, although the regulator said it will continue monitoring compliance.

Ofcom also confirmed it has opened a new investigation into Bit Hive, operator of Eporner.com, to assess whether its age verification measures meet the Act’s requirement for ‘highly effective’ age assurance.

Separately, the regulator expanded its existing investigation into Kemono.cr to examine whether the platform failed to comply with statutory information requests.

Ofcom said robust age verification is a core requirement of the Online Safety Act and warned that providers failing to implement effective protections or cooperate with regulatory investigations should expect enforcement action, including substantial financial penalties.

The regulator added that it prioritises investigations according to user reach and will continue monitoring compliance across online pornography services.

Why does it matter?

The case demonstrates that the UK’s Online Safety Act has entered a new phase of active enforcement. Rather than focusing solely on guidance and compliance deadlines, Ofcom is now imposing financial penalties and investigating platforms that fail to implement effective child protection measures.

The decision also shows that enforcement extends beyond age verification itself. Companies that fail to cooperate with regulatory investigations or provide required information may face additional sanctions, reinforcing the regulator’s ability to oversee compliance across online platforms.

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Google rolls out AI video editing in Google Photos

Google is rolling out Google Photos Video Remix for Google Photos, a new AI-powered editing feature that transforms videos using ready-made templates and generative effects.

Powered by Gemini Omni, Google’s multimodal AI model, the feature is designed to help users create stylised video clips without professional editing skills or dedicated video software.

Available through the Create tab in Google Photos, Video Remix lets users apply effects such as cinematic relighting, background changes and artistic styles including watercolour, raw sketchbook and oil painting.

Google says users can, for example, make a video appear as though it was filmed in a greenhouse, add a morning glow to a dark clip, or transform footage into a watercolour-style animation.

The launch forms part of Google’s broader effort to integrate generative AI across its consumer products. In Google Photos, the company has also introduced AI-powered editing tools and features that generate outfit ideas from photos of clothing.

Video Remix is rolling out to eligible Google AI Plus, Pro and Ultra subscribers in selected countries, including the United States, Argentina, Brazil, India, Japan, Mexico, South Korea and Türkiye.

Why does it matter?

Video Remix reflects how generative AI video editing is becoming a mainstream consumer feature rather than a specialist capability. By embedding AI-powered creative tools directly into Google Photos, Google is lowering the barrier to producing stylised video content while further integrating generative AI into everyday digital experiences.

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Japan reviews AI search use of news content

Japan’s Fair Trade Commission has launched a review of how generative AI search services use news content, examining concerns over unauthorised use of articles and compensation for publishers. The survey will gather information from around 370 domestic news organisations, including newspapers, publishers, broadcasters and news agencies.

The review will also include discussions with major technology companies, including Google and LY Corp. Regulators want to understand how AI-powered search services access, display and potentially monetise news content produced by publishers.

A key focus is the growth of zero-click searches, where users receive AI-generated summaries without visiting the original publisher’s website. News organisations argue that the trend could reduce traffic, advertising revenue and incentives to invest in professional journalism.

The Commission will assess whether any practices breach Japan’s Antimonopoly Act, including through the abuse of a dominant market position. Its findings could shape future policies on AI content use, publisher compensation and competition in digital media markets.

Why does it matter?

Generative AI search is reshaping how people discover news by increasingly providing answers directly within search results. While this may improve convenience for users, it also raises concerns that publishers could lose traffic, advertising revenue and the economic incentives needed to sustain quality journalism.

Japan’s review reflects a broader international debate over how AI companies should use and compensate for news content. The outcome could influence future competition policy, licensing arrangements and the relationship between AI-powered search services and media organisations.

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Global groups call for stronger AI accountability rules

Global organisations have called for AI governance frameworks that prioritise trust, information integrity and child safety, backed by enforceable accountability from AI companies.

The European Broadcasting Union delivered the message alongside Fondation Abeona, the Global Trust Challenge and 5Rights Foundation at a side event of the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva.

The groups warned that AI companies are increasingly shaping how people access and evaluate information, while traditional markers of editorial accountability, such as bylines and editorial principles, may become less visible to audiences.

They also pointed to declining public trust in news and rising use of AI chatbots as information sources.

Child safety was another central concern. 5Rights Foundation warned that children are adopting generative AI faster than adults, while many AI systems are not designed with children’s rights and development in mind.

The organisations presented three recommendations to the UN Global Dialogue.

They called for public service media to be recognised as trust anchors in national AI governance frameworks.

They also urged stronger safeguards requiring AI systems that affect children to be demonstrably safe, accurate and effective before reaching the market.

A third recommendation called for open, interoperable standards and sandboxed environments, so that information infrastructure is not shaped solely by technology companies.

Why does it matter?

The side event links AI accountability to two sensitive areas: information integrity and child safety. As AI systems become gateways to news, search and everyday information, governance frameworks will need clearer rules on accuracy, sourcing, attribution and responsibility. The child-safety recommendation also establishes a stronger accountability standard: AI systems that affect children should be proven safe and effective before deployment, rather than relying on harm mitigation after problems emerge.

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Viber brings ChatGPT into its messaging app

Rakuten Viber has launched ChatGPT-powered tools inside its messaging app through a new partnership with OpenAI.

The integration allows users to ask questions in a dedicated ChatGPT chat or tab, mention @ChatGPT in supported private and group chats, summarise conversations and shared links, polish draft messages, translate messages and remix images.

Viber said most tools are available after users update the app, without requiring ChatGPT registration.

Image Remix requires users to log in to ChatGPT within Viber or create a free account. OpenAI says availability may vary by region, app version, account and chat type.

The privacy model depends on the feature used. Viber says its core messaging features remain protected by end-to-end encryption, while ChatGPT-powered tools are activated only when users choose to use them.

When a ChatGPT-powered feature is used, Viber sends OpenAI the information needed to process that request. Depending on the feature, that may include selected messages, drafts, images, prompts, link content, messages that mention @ChatGPT, timestamps, approximate location and a Viber-generated hashed user ID.

OpenAI says data sent from ChatGPT-powered features in Viber personal and group chats is not used to train its models, except for conversations in the ChatGPT tab.

If a user connects a ChatGPT account, activity may be associated with that account and handled under OpenAI’s standard retention and data settings.

Why does it matter?

The launch brings generative AI into everyday messaging, moving ChatGPT from a separate assistant into conversations, links, drafts, translations and images. That makes AI tools more accessible, but also creates a more complex privacy model. Users need to understand when messages remain inside an end-to-end encrypted chat and when selected content is sent to OpenAI for processing. For messaging platforms, the key governance challenge is adding useful AI features while preserving user control, clear consent and transparent data handling.

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X expands creator tools to reduce AI slop and recycled content

X has introduced new video editing and recording tools to encourage users to create original content directly on the platform.

The update includes multilingual caption overlays, customisable subtitles, trimming tools, and green-screen features that let creators to combine videos with photos from their devices or existing X posts.

X head of product Nikita Bier said the company wants to make it easier for users to create videos natively rather than relying on content first published elsewhere.

The update comes as X faces growing pressure over recycled posts, stolen videos and low-quality content that can be amplified through engagement and monetisation systems.

Bier said many high-performing accounts continue to repost videos that went viral years earlier, reducing incentives for original creators to publish directly on X.

Video now accounts for almost half of all impressions on the platform, making content quality and attribution increasingly important for X’s creator strategy.

The company has also taken steps to reduce rewards for accounts that reupload material from smaller creators to game its revenue-sharing programme.

The new tools are therefore part of a wider push to make original video creation easier while discouraging recycled and unattributed content.

Why does it matter?

X’s update shows how platform design and creator incentives are becoming part of the response to low-quality, recycled and synthetic content. Native editing tools can help users produce original material, but the harder governance problem is attribution and monetisation. As AI makes it cheaper to generate or repackage text, images and video at scale, platforms will need stronger systems to distinguish original human creativity, authorised reuse and automated content farming.

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EU urged to cover platform monetisation in Digital Fairness Act

A coalition of civil society organisations, academics, and advocates has published an open letter urging the European Commission to ensure that forthcoming Digital Fairness Act rules on influencer marketing extend beyond third-party advertising payments to include income generated through platform monetisation services.

The signatories welcome the Commission’s proposal to require influencers to disclose payments received for their content but argue that it leaves a significant transparency gap. They note that social media platforms increasingly provide creators with monetisation tools such as subscriptions, donations, affiliate marketing, branded partnerships and platform-funded bonus programmes, many of which would fall outside rules focused solely on third-party advertising payments.

The letter proposes minimum transparency measures including labels identifying content that benefits from platform monetisation, account-level labels showing participation in monetisation programmes, public monetisation libraries to support independent oversight, and disclosures explaining platforms’ monetisation policies, moderation practices and enforcement.

The coalition, whose members include AlgorithmWatch, Bits of Freedom, Corporate Europe Observatory, and the Digital Rights Foundation, together with academic experts including an associate professor from Finland’s Hanken School of Economics, has invited the Commission to discuss ways of incorporating these proposals into the Digital Fairness Act before it is finalised.

Why does it matter?

The debate reflects a broader shift in how online influence is financed. Increasingly, creators earn income not only from advertisers but also through platform-designed monetisation systems that reward engagement, subscriptions and other forms of user activity. Without transparency around these incentives, audiences may struggle to distinguish between organic content and content shaped by commercial rewards built into platform design.

The Digital Fairness Act, therefore, presents an opportunity to broaden consumer protection beyond traditional advertising disclosure. Extending transparency requirements to platform monetisation could improve accountability for creators and platforms alike while giving regulators, researchers and users greater visibility into the financial incentives shaping online content.

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WSIS panel calls for a broader approach to youth mental health online

A WSIS Forum 2026 session called for a broader approach to young people’s mental health online, warning that screen time alone is an insufficient measure of digital well-being.

The session, ‘Young people’s mental health in an online world’, examined the impact of digital devices and social media on young people’s mental health, with speakers addressing regulation, education, psychological support and legal remedies.

Alexandre Carette, Information Specialist at the UN in Geneva and moderator of the session, said digital use is not only a concern for young people or experts, but for everyone who relies on digital tools. He linked the discussion to wider UN debates on access, privacy and the role of digital technologies in everyday life.

Niels Weber, a psychologist and psychotherapist in Switzerland specialising in hyperconnectivity, said screen time gives only limited information about young people’s mental health. He argued that the more important questions are what young people do on screens, what they do away from screens, and how digital practices fit into their wider development.

Weber also cautioned against describing most problematic digital use as addiction. He said many platforms are designed to prolong use, but that such a design should be understood as a retention problem rather than automatically as addiction. In clinical terms, he said the more relevant marker is suffering, either for the young person or for families who experience digital use as a constant source of conflict.

Tatiana Debrabandere, Project Manager at the High Council for Media Literacy in Belgium, said that francophone Belgium’s media education framework allows authorities and educators to study children’s and young people’s digital practices across life stages. She said young people are often informed and can have positive online experiences, but that policy debates still focus too much on limiting time online rather than understanding what they actually do there.

Debrabandere said media education should start from young people’s own practices, including what they watch, whom they follow and how they access information. She pointed to influencers and content creators as an important area for media literacy, especially where young people may struggle to distinguish journalism, opinion and commercial promotion.

Daniella Esi Darlington, CEO and co-founder of Alleina AI in Ghana and a member of ITU Secretary-General’s Youth Advisory Board, said young people are among the most active internet users and are therefore often exposed to digital harms. She argued that many platforms are not designed safely enough for young users and that algorithms are built to keep people engaged for long periods.

Darlington also stressed that technology can be part of the response. She cited awareness-raising, advocacy, reporting tools, access to counsellors and AI systems that can help identify cyberbullying as examples of how digital tools can support young people when combined with human oversight.

The panel also discussed loneliness and AI companions. Darlington warned that chatbots should not replace qualified professionals when young people discuss depression, anxiety or other forms of distress. Instead, she said systems should redirect users towards appropriate support and keep humans involved.

Speakers favoured education, dialogue and co-created policy over blanket bans. Debrabandere described political moves in Belgium towards smartphone bans in schools and possible social media restrictions, while Darlington argued that banning social media or internet access would not address the root causes of harm. She said young people also use the internet for research, business, opportunities and communication.

Darlington called for stronger governance frameworks, including child-specific human rights impact assessments in AI and digital policy. She said young people, parents, schools, governments, industry and other stakeholders should be involved in designing safer digital environments.

Weber gave a practical example from therapy, explaining that video games can sometimes help rebuild dialogue between young people and families. By opening a game during a therapy session, he said adults can better understand young people’s emotions, relationships and digital experiences.

Audience interventions raised additional concerns, including neurodivergent children, cyberbullying, individualised media consumption and peer accompaniment models. A participant from Colombia’s regulator asked whether there is sufficient evidence about technology’s impact on mental health and how platforms could be made to take greater responsibility.

Carette said science often shows correlation rather than clear causality, but warned that waiting for definitive proof could delay action. He argued that the lack of transparency in platform business models and algorithms is already a sufficient reason for regulatory attention, not only for young people but for society as a whole.

The session concluded that young people’s digital well-being should be understood in context, taking account of platform design, family life, education, loneliness, social pressure and access to support. Rather than relying only on bans or addiction labels, speakers pointed to media literacy, dialogue, youth participation and stronger accountability for technology providers.

Track all key moments from the WSIS Forum 2026 on our dedicated WSIS page.

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Reddit expands AI moderation to combat spam and harmful content

Reddit has expanded its automated moderation systems to reduce spam, inauthentic activity and harmful content across the platform.

The company said it is using AI to detect manipulated and spam-like behaviour through new signals and faster enforcement.

Reddit said suspicious accounts can now be identified from the moment they are created, while large language models help detect coordinated fake behaviour and artificial hype that older systems may miss.

According to the company, updated automated systems are blocking 23 million spam views each day before they reach users.

They are also identifying around 25,000 new spam posts and comments daily and revoking nearly two million inauthentic votes per day.

Reddit said user exposure to spam fell by about 20% from January to March 2026 compared with the previous three months, followed by a further 10% to 15% decline in overall spam account exposure.

The company has also expanded automated enforcement against hate and violent content across all English-language text on Reddit.

The average enforcement time for such content has fallen to under 5 seconds, while enforcement actions have increased by more than 200%, according to Reddit.

The company said faster enforcement has reduced exposure to potentially harmful content by more than 40%, while false removals have also fallen by over 40%.

Reddit said AI-based tools remain part of a wider moderation model that includes site-wide safety teams, volunteer community moderators and user voting.

Why does it matter?

Reddit’s update shows how major platforms are using AI not only to generate or recommend content, but also to police authenticity, spam and harmful behaviour at scale. Faster automated enforcement can reduce user exposure before content spreads, but it also raises familiar governance questions around transparency, false positives, appeals and the balance between automation and human moderation. The company’s emphasis on layered moderation suggests that AI is becoming central to platform safety, while still depending on human teams, volunteer moderators and community signals.

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