The European Parliament has reaffirmed the extension of Chat Control 1.0, allowing service providers like Google, Meta, and Microsoft to legally scan users' electronic communications. This decision follows a procedural maneuver by President Roberta Metsola to enable a second vote after the initial rejection in March. The new ruling temporarily suspends the ePrivacy directive, granting these companies the legal basis to voluntarily review messages and emails exchanged through their services. Critics argue this undermines democratic processes and lacks evidence of effectiveness, noting only 0.00000077% of messages contained illegal content and that false positives account for 20%. The measure will remain in effect for 24 months.
Bias read (Center): While the issue of digital privacy regulation is politically charged, the article presents both sides of the debate—supporting the extension as necessary for service providers and criticizing it as undemocratic and ineffective. The framing remains balanced between pro-regulation arguments and anti-滥


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