The European Commission is pushing for the implementation and enforcement of the Digital Service Act (DSA). It is now taking action against six Member States that failed to.
The European Union's rebooted e-commerce rules start to apply in full from tomorrow setting new legal obligations on the likely thousands of platforms and digital businesses that fall in scope. The Digital Services Act (DSA) is a massive endeavour by the EU to set an online governance framework for platforms and use transparency obligations as a tool to squeeze illegal content and products off the regional internet. If something is illegal to say or sell in a particular Member State it should not be possible to workaround the law by taking to the Internet is the basic idea.
The European Union's rebooted e-commerce rules start to apply in full from tomorrow setting new legal obligations on the likely thousands of platforms and digital businesses that fall in scope. The Digital Services Act (DSA) is a massive endeavour by the EU to set an online governance framework for platforms and use transparency obligations as a tool to squeeze illegal content and products off the regional internet. If something is illegal to say or sell in a particular Member State it should not be possible to workaround the law by taking to the Internet is the basic idea.
The European Union's rebooted e-commerce rules start to apply in full from tomorrow setting new legal obligations on the likely thousands of platforms The European Union's rebooted ecommerce rules start to apply in full from tomorrow setting new legal obligations on the likely thousands of platforms and digital businesses that fall in scope. Read on for the lowdown.
The European Union's rebooted e-commerce rules start to apply in full from tomorrow setting new legal obligations on the likely thousands of platforms and digital businesses that fall in scope. The Digital Services Act (DSA) is a massive endeavour by the EU to set an online governance framework for platforms and use transparency obligations as a tool to squeeze illegal content and products off the regional internet. If something is illegal to say or sell in a particular Member State it should not be possible to workaround the law by taking to the Internet is the basic idea.