Technology law expert Wesley Horion of Pinsent Masons said the CJEU’s judgment significantly narrows the traditional understanding of “passive hosting” and is relevant to how many online platforms personalise services for users.
“This marks an important shift: content surfacing and amplification decisions, central to engagement-driven platform models, become directly relevant to liability, with the result that the same piece of unlawful content could trigger different outcomes depending on whether it is neutrally hosted or algorithmically promoted,” Horion said.
Horion said the judgment is the latest by the EU court that puts constraints on the safe harbour protections for online platforms. He cited the CJEU’s ruling in the case of Romanian website operator Russmedia Digital as another example in recent months, in which the court determined that online marketplaces are responsible for verifying personal information in adverts posted on their platforms. Horion said the erosion of safe harbour protections has potential implications for business models built on user engagement.
“Against that backdrop, and with the European Commission currently exploring further intervention through a potential Digital Fairness Act targeting addictive or manipulative designs, platform operators may need to anticipate a broader shift from neutral intermediaries towards more actively regulated actors, with end-to-end responsibility for how content is selected, surfaced and monetised,” Horion said.
David Barker, who specialises in technology litigation and supports businesses across the technology, science and industry sector, said the AI age raises new questions about what intermediaries should and should not be deemed responsible for online.
“The EU's E-Commerce Directive enacted in 2000 marked a general international recognition that internet intermediaries should enjoy a high degree of protection from liability in relation to the use of their services by third parties,” Barker said.
“Since then, we have had two very significant waves of technological advancement which have tested that proposition. The first was the introduction of Web 2.0 which enabled a dramatic increase in user-to-user interaction. If anyone were to look today at how the web looked back in the early 2000s they would find it extremely clunky: content on the internet was essentially static, not dynamic or interactive. Yet despite the quite dramatic changes which accompanied Web 2.0, the protections for intermediaries largely held up during this period of technological change.”
“The advent of widespread use of AI represents a second major technological advancement and it is unsurprising that intermediary liability is again under the microscope. What needs to be resisted here, however, is the notion that intermediaries should assume liability for everything, in all circumstances, i.e. that the pendulum should now swing the other way. To take this approach would have far-reaching consequences not only for commerce but also for freedom of expression,” Barker said.