European Parliament

Press release

26-03-2026

Plenary session   LIBE

Child sexual abuse online: voluntary detection measures will not be extended

 

On Thursday, Parliament voted to not prolong an interim derogation from e-Privacy rules allowing service providers to voluntarily detect child sexual abuse online.

With 228 votes in favour, 311 against, and 92 abstentions, MEPs rejected the Commission proposal, closing EP first reading on extending an existing derogation of the ePrivacy Directive. The purpose of the proposed extension was to continue temporary measures while negotiations continue on a long-term legal framework to prevent and combat child sexual abuse online.

The Parliament position, adopted on 11 March 2026, favoured extending the measures for a shorter period (until August 2027) than the Commission proposal and with narrower scope to ensure the measures remain proportional and targeted.

Negotiations with Council on the proposal did not lead to an agreement. The interim regulation will therefore expire after 3 April 2026.

 

Background

The voluntary exemption was already extended in 2024. Parliament has been ready for negotiations on the permanent framework since November 2023. Since Council adopted its position in November 2025, talks on the permanent law have been ongoing.

Further information

Procedure file

Profile of the rapporteur: Birgit Sippel (S&D, Germany)

Article: How the EU is fighting child sexual abuse online

Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs

 

Janne OJAMO

Press Officer (FI)

 

+32 228 41250 (BXL)

 

+32 470 89 21 92

 

janne.ojamo@europarl.europa.eu

 

libe-press@europarl.europa.eu

 

EP_Justice

 

 

Thea PIERIDOU

Head of the EP Office in Cyprus

30 Vyronos Avenue – 1096 Nicosia

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22 870500 / 22 396485

thea.pieridou@ep.europa.eu  

 

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