Will EU DSA fact-checking rules change by end of 2025?
Rules remain unchanged • 25%
Rules become stricter • 25%
Rules become more lenient • 25%
Rules are repealed • 25%
Official announcements from the European Commission
Google Rejects EU Fact-Checking Rules Under Digital Services Act, Effective 2025
Jan 19, 2025, 08:57 AM
Google has informed the European Union that it will not comply with the upcoming mandatory fact-checking requirements under the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA). The DSA aims to combat disinformation by requiring platforms to integrate third-party fact-checking into services like Google Search and YouTube. Despite having signed the EU's voluntary Code of Practice on Disinformation in 2022, Google has announced its withdrawal from all fact-checking commitments before these become legally binding. In a letter to Renate Nikolay, Deputy Director General of the European Commission, Kent Walker, Google's Global Affairs President, stated that the fact-checking requirements are "not appropriate or effective" for Google's services. Instead, Google plans to enhance its existing content moderation tools, such as YouTube's contextual notes, Synth ID watermarking for AI-generated content, and other measures demonstrated during the 2024 global elections. This decision follows similar moves by Meta and X (formerly Twitter), which have reduced their fact-checking efforts. The EU has not yet finalized when the new rules will come into force, but they are expected to be implemented in 2025.
View original story
Other response • 25%
Comply with regulations • 25%
Defy regulations like Google • 25%
Seek legal exemptions • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No changes • 25%
Reinstated original program • 25%
New community-based system • 25%
Hybrid system of both • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Google complies with regulations • 25%
Google faces fines • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
EU drops fact-checking requirement • 25%
All comply • 25%
Compromise reached • 25%
None comply • 25%
Some comply, some resist • 25%