EPRS reveals critical Cybersecurity Act impact assessment gaps

The European Parliamentary Research Service has published an initial appraisal of the European Commission’s impact assessment for the proposed revision of the Cybersecurity Act, finding that the Commission makes a strong case for reform while leaving several analytical gaps.

The Commission proposed the revision on 20 January 2026, alongside a directive on simplification measures under the NIS2 Directive. The proposals were referred to the European Parliament’s Committee on Industry, Research and Energy.

The package covers ENISA’s mandate, the European Cybersecurity Certification Framework, NIS2 compliance simplification and a proposed EU-level framework for ICT supply chain security. EPRS said the impact assessment responds to a more complex cybersecurity landscape, stalled implementation of certification rules, fragmented compliance requirements and growing supply chain risks.

The briefing found that the Commission’s assessment effectively substantiates the need to revise the Cybersecurity Act. It praised the problem definition, intervention logic, use of qualitative and quantitative analysis, SME test, competitiveness check and transparency around evidence and methodology.

However, EPRS also identified weaknesses. It said the assessment lacks operational objectives, does not include a subsidiarity grid despite the initiative’s political significance, and has no distinct proportionality section. The briefing also questioned whether some policy options are sufficiently distinct, noting that they appear partly cumulative.

EPRS said stakeholder consultation feedback could have been reflected more clearly, especially in the analysis of policy options, impacts and the preferred approach. It also noted that the Regulatory Scrutiny Board first issued a negative opinion on the draft impact assessment, then later issued a positive opinion with reservations.

The briefing concluded that the Commission’s legislative proposals are mostly aligned with the preferred options in the impact assessment, although some issues remain.

Why does it matter?

The Cybersecurity Act revision could reshape several pillars of the EU cyber policy at once, including ENISA’s role, cybersecurity certification, NIS2 compliance and ICT supply chain security. EPRS’s appraisal matters because it provides lawmakers with an early quality check of the evidence underpinning the Commission’s proposal. The briefing suggests the policy case for reform is strong, but also highlights gaps that may become important during parliamentary scrutiny, especially around proportionality, subsidiarity and the design of policy options.

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UK plans major social media ban for under-16s

The UK government plans to introduce a social media ban for children under 16 as part of a wider package of online safety measures aimed at reducing children’s exposure to harmful content and risky online interactions.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the planned restrictions are intended to protect children from harmful material, excessive screen time and contact with unknown adults online. The measure is expected to apply to major social media platforms, while gaming and livestreaming services could face restrictions on features that allow children to interact with strangers.

The move follows a national consultation on children’s online safety, which examined possible age restrictions on social media and other online services, as well as limits on addictive design features and risky functionalities.

Further details are expected on implementation and enforcement, including how platforms would be required to verify users’ ages. The government has previously said that restrictions on children’s access to social media should be considered alongside broader protections for gaming platforms, AI chatbots and other online services used by young people.

The proposal would place the UK among a growing number of countries moving towards age-based restrictions on children’s access to social media. Australia has already adopted an under-16 social media ban, while other governments are considering similar approaches.

Supporters argue that age restrictions could reduce online harms and give parents clearer backing in setting boundaries for children’s technology use. Critics warn that enforcement may raise privacy concerns, increase reliance on age-verification systems and push children towards less regulated online spaces.

Why does it matter?

The proposal would move the UK closer to an age-based model of online safety regulation, where platforms may be expected to prevent under-16s from accessing certain services rather than only reduce harmful content after children join. That raises major governance questions around age assurance, privacy, platform design, parental responsibility and enforcement. The measure could also increase pressure on social media, gaming, livestreaming and AI chatbot services to redesign features that expose children to unknown adults, addictive interaction patterns or harmful content.

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EU and Brazil strengthen cooperation through new Digital Partnership

The European Union and Brazil have signed a new Digital Partnership to strengthen cooperation on shared digital policy priorities, including AI, data governance, digital infrastructure, connectivity, online platforms and digital public goods and services.

The partnership was signed in Brasília and is intended to raise EU-Brazil digital cooperation to a more strategic level. According to the European Commission, Digital Partnerships are a core instrument of the EU’s external digital policy and are used to structure cooperation with like-minded partners.

The agreement builds on more than two decades of EU-Brazil cooperation, including the EU-Brazil Strategic Partnership and the existing EU-Brazil Digital Dialogue. The two sides said the partnership will support joint work on resilient global supply chains, rules-based digital governance and wider sharing of the benefits of technological progress.

The signing follows the adoption of mutual EU-Brazil data adequacy decisions in January 2026, which allow personal data to flow freely and securely between the two jurisdictions without additional requirements. The Commission described those decisions as creating the world’s largest area of free and safe data flows, covering around 670 million consumers.

Future cooperation under the Digital Partnership will be developed through technical workstreams and high-level exchanges. The first Digital Partnership Council is expected to meet within the next year to set out a joint roadmap for cooperation.

Why does it matter?

The partnership strengthens digital cooperation between the EU and one of Latin America’s largest economies at a time when AI governance, data protection, online platforms and digital public infrastructure are becoming central to international relations. It also shows how the EU is using digital partnerships and data adequacy decisions to expand trusted digital cooperation beyond Europe, while promoting regulatory alignment, secure data flows and shared approaches to global digital governance.

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Singapore warns of Microsoft impersonation scams causing major losses

The Singapore Police Force (SPF) and the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore (CSA) have warned the public about technical support scams that impersonate Microsoft. Authorities said at least 10 cases had been reported since February 2026, with total losses exceeding S$1.7 million.

In this scam variant, victims typically encounter a pop-up alert in their web browser. The alert falsely appears to originate from Microsoft and claims that the user’s device has been hacked or compromised.

Victims are then instructed to contact a so-called technical support officer through an internet-based phone number. After making contact, victims may be transferred to another scammer posing as a police officer, who claims that their device has been used for criminal activities such as money laundering.

Authorities in Singapore said victims may be instructed to make bank transfers, provide banking credentials, or grant remote access to their devices. In some cases, scammers asked victims to download remote access applications or click links that allowed them to take control of bank accounts.

SPF and CSA advised members of the public to verify alerts through official software provider channels. They noted that Microsoft does not include phone numbers in error or warning messages, and that users should not call numbers displayed in suspicious pop-ups or click links or buttons within such alerts.

People who believe they have fallen victim to the scam are advised to disconnect their computer from the internet, contact their bank, remove applications installed under the scammer’s instructions, and run an anti-virus scan. They should also change passwords and banking credentials using a trusted device, remove unauthorised payees, and report the incident to the police and CSA’s SingCERT.

Why does it matter?

Technical support scams remain one of the most effective forms of cyber-enabled fraud because they combine social engineering, impersonation and remote access techniques. By exploiting trust in well-known brands such as Microsoft and creating a sense of urgency, scammers can persuade victims to hand over sensitive information or direct access to their devices.

The cases also highlight how cybersecurity and financial security are increasingly interconnected. Basic cyber hygiene practices, such as verifying security alerts through official channels, avoiding unsolicited remote access requests and reporting incidents quickly, can help prevent account compromise and reduce financial losses.

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EDPB adopts common data breach notification template for GDPR compliance

The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has adopted a common template for data breach notifications as part of efforts to simplify GDPR compliance and improve consistency across the EU. The template is intended to help organisations and Data Protection Authorities structure, harmonise and unify breach notification processes.

The template is designed to ensure that data breach notifications contain the information required under Article 33 of the GDPR, which governs the notification of personal data breaches to supervisory authorities. The EDPB said the common format should make it easier for organisations to submit timely data breach notifications and help responsible authorities assess cases.

The template includes predefined fields, response options and guidance to help organisations complete notifications more efficiently. The EDPB said the approach could reduce administrative costs and save time, particularly for smaller organisations that lack dedicated data protection or legal expertise.

The template will be subject to public consultation until 5 August 2026. Following the consultation, the EDPB will determine the timeline for implementation by national Data Protection Authorities.

During the same plenary, the EDPB met with Commissioner for Democracy, Justice, the Rule of Law and Consumer Protection Michael McGrath to discuss common priorities. The Digital Omnibus package was also discussed, with the Board warning that proposed changes to the definition of personal data could significantly weaken privacy protections for individuals.

Discussions also covered cross-regulatory cooperation, children’s data, political advertising, and international data transfers. The Board also stressed that adequate funding and staffing for Data Protection Authorities remain essential for the effective enforcement of data protection rules.

Why does it matter?

Data breach notification requirements are a key component of the GDPR, helping regulators assess risks and ensuring organisations respond appropriately when personal data is compromised. However, differences in reporting practices across EU member states can create additional compliance burdens, particularly for smaller organisations operating across multiple jurisdictions.

The common template represents another step towards greater regulatory harmonisation within the EU’s data protection framework. By standardising breach reporting requirements, the EDPB aims to reduce administrative complexity, improve the quality of notifications and support more consistent enforcement of data protection rules across Europe.

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EU publishes the final Code for labelling AI-generated content

The European Commission has published the final Code of Practice on marking and labelling AI-generated content, offering practical guidance for providers and deployers preparing to comply with transparency obligations under the EU AI Act.

The code is voluntary, but the underlying transparency obligations in Article 50 of the AI Act will apply from 2 August 2026. The Commission said the code is intended to help organisations implement those obligations in a consistent, practical and proportionate way.

The framework covers two main areas. Providers of generative AI systems are guided on marking and detecting AI-generated or manipulated audio, image, video and text content, including through machine-readable solutions where technically feasible. Deployers are guided on labelling deepfakes and AI-generated or manipulated text published to inform the public on matters of public interest.

Under the AI Act, users must also be informed when they are interacting with interactive AI systems, such as chatbots. The transparency requirements are intended to help people recognise when content has been generated or altered by AI and to reduce the risk of deception and manipulation.

The Commission has also published a set of the EU icons that deployers may use to label certain AI-generated content. The code does not replace the AI Act or future Commission guidelines on Article 50, which are expected before the transparency obligations begin to apply.

The Commission and the AI Board will now assess the code’s adequacy. If assessed positively, providers and deployers who sign the code may use its measures to help demonstrate compliance with the AI Act’s transparency rules.

Why does it matter?

The code is an important step in turning the AI Act’s transparency provisions into operational practice. Labelling and machine-readable marking rules could shape how platforms, AI providers, media organisations and other deployers handle synthetic text, images, audio and video. The measures are especially relevant for public-interest information, where undisclosed AI-generated or manipulated content can affect trust, elections, journalism and public debate.

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Snapchat introduces friends-only content sharing for users under 16

Snapchat has begun rolling out new content-sharing protections for users aged 13 to 15, limiting the visibility of their Stories and Spotlight videos to mutually accepted friends.

Under the new experience, younger teens will have a dedicated profile where they can create, save and showcase content. Still, it will not be visible to one-sided followers or the wider Snapchat community. Snap said users in this age group will no longer be able to post Spotlight content that is visible to non-friend audiences.

The company said the change is intended to create a more private sharing environment for younger teenagers. Snapchat users under 16 will also no longer have engagement metrics such as favourite counts.

Snap said users aged 16 to 17 will have an optional introduction to public sharing, with additional safeguards, limited distribution and parental visibility. Users aged 18 and over will continue to have full access to public profiles and broader distribution tools.

The update forms part of Snapchat’s wider teen safety approach, which includes stricter default privacy settings, limits on unwanted contact, moderated public content and parental tools through Family Center.

Why does it matter?

The update reflects a broader shift towards age-appropriate design and privacy-by-default settings for younger users. By limiting public distribution for users aged 13 to 15, Snapchat is reducing minors’ exposure to unknown audiences and public engagement metrics. The change is relevant to ongoing regulatory debates on children’s online safety, platform design, algorithmic distribution and the mental health effects of public social media engagement.

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ENISA finds Cyber Resilience Act driving SBOM adoption across industries

The European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) has published a report on Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) adoption, finding that the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) is accelerating investment in software supply chain transparency across organisations. The report, titled ‘SBOM Adoption State of Play – 2026‘, analyses survey results gathered at the end of 2025.

The survey examined how organisations of different sizes and across multiple sectors are approaching SBOM adoption in response to the Cyber Resilience Act. ENISA said the regulation is transforming SBOMs from a voluntary software supply chain security practice into a mandatory requirement for products with digital elements placed on the EU market.

The report found that 78% of respondents had already begun implementing SBOMs, while 44% were in a pilot or limited deployment phase. ENISA also said 79% of organisations expect to reach the necessary SBOM maturity level by the time the Cyber Resilience Act becomes fully applicable in December 2027.

Organisations are investing in SBOM generation, automation, and integration into the software development lifecycle. Respondents cited benefits including risk reduction, cost avoidance, operational efficiency, regulatory compliance, contractual alignment and competitive advantage.

ENISA also identified barriers to the adoption of SBOMs at scale. Key challenges include achieving greater SBOM completeness, improving data quality, correlating vulnerabilities, obtaining SBOMs from suppliers and third parties, and developing the necessary internal expertise and staffing.

The report says further progress will depend on shared implementation practices, supplier transparency, workforce capabilities, and clearer integration of SBOMs into operational risk management. ENISA said organisations would also benefit from external support, including reference implementations, tool-selection guidance, conformance testing, standardised formats and clearer definitions of what constitutes a sufficiently complete SBOM.

Why does it matter?

Software supply chains have become a major cybersecurity concern as organisations increasingly rely on complex networks of open-source and third-party components. SBOMs provide visibility into the software components used within products, helping organisations identify vulnerabilities, assess risks and respond more effectively to security incidents.

The report highlights how the Cyber Resilience Act is driving a shift from voluntary software transparency practices to formal compliance requirements. The findings also illustrate that while adoption is progressing, organisations continue to face technical, organisational and supply-chain challenges that could influence the effectiveness of future software security efforts.

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Ofcom confirms platform crisis protocols under UK Online Safety Act

UK communications regulator Ofcom has set out new crisis response measures aimed at helping online platforms respond when illegal content and content harmful to children spreads rapidly during emergencies.

The measures will be added to Ofcom’s Illegal Content Codes of Practice and Protection of Children Codes of Practice under the UK’s Online Safety Act. However, they must still complete the parliamentary process before taking effect.

Ofcom said ordinary content moderation systems may not be sufficient during exceptional events, such as public disorder, terrorist attacks, or other crises that lead to a sudden increase in harmful or illegal online activity. The regulator pointed to the violent riots that followed the 2024 Southport murders and the risk of terrorist attacks being livestreamed as examples of crises where online content can threaten public safety.

Under the measures, service providers should prepare and apply crisis protocols to manage significant increases in relevant illegal content or content harmful to children. Ofcom expects providers to deploy temporary response teams as soon as possible during a crisis, record key decisions and conduct post-crisis reviews to assess whether their response was effective.

Large platforms should also maintain dedicated communication channels for law enforcement agencies to share crisis-related information. Ofcom said the measures are intended to support faster and more coordinated public safety efforts during exceptional events.

The regulator consulted on crisis response protocols in 2025 and said further decisions on additional online safety measures are expected in autumn 2026.

Why does it matter?

The measures show how online safety regulation is moving from general content moderation duties towards operational crisis governance. In emergencies, platforms may face sudden spikes in illegal content, livestreamed harm or coordinated activity that ordinary moderation systems cannot manage quickly enough. Ofcom’s approach also formalises closer crisis-time coordination between large platforms and law enforcement, raising important questions about public safety, platform accountability, due process and safeguards under the UK Online Safety Act.

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Google highlights rising online scam threats

Google has warned that online scams remain a major global challenge, citing estimates that fraud losses could reach nearly $580 billion in 2025.

In its latest fraud and scams advisory, the company said phishing attacks are becoming more sophisticated, with criminals using adversary-in-the-middle techniques and QR code phishing, also known as quishing, to steal credentials and bypass security measures.

The advisory also highlighted risks linked to cryptocurrency investment scams, malicious finance applications and police impersonation schemes. According to Google, scammers are using AI, social engineering and trusted digital services to deceive users, obtain money and collect sensitive information.

Google said its Trust & Safety teams are using AI tools, predictive analytics and policy enforcement to detect and disrupt fraudulent activity across its services. The company also pointed to measures such as stronger protections for session cookies, enforcement against deceptive crypto ads, monitoring of post-installation app behaviour and developer identity verification for apps installed on certified Android devices.

The company urged users to be cautious of unsolicited communications, unrealistic investment promises, unexpected QR codes and requests for personal or financial information.

Why does it matter?

The advisory shows how online fraud is becoming a cross-platform governance problem rather than a narrow cybersecurity issue. Scams now rely on trusted cloud services, mobile apps, messaging platforms, crypto infrastructure and impersonation of public authorities. That creates pressure on major technology companies to strengthen detection, app accountability and policy enforcement, while raising broader questions about consumer protection, platform responsibility and digital trust.

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