The European Union is preparing new rules that would require social media platforms to be more transparent about how they use artificial intelligence in content moderation decisions, according to Reuters. The planned legislation is aimed at giving regulators and users a clearer view of when automated systems shape what stays online and what gets removed.
The move comes amid wider concern in Europe over the growing role of AI in policing online speech, ranking posts, and flagging harmful content. Lawmakers and digital rights advocates have argued that opaque systems can produce errors, bias, and inconsistent enforcement, especially when platforms rely heavily on automation.
If adopted, the proposal could force companies to disclose more detail about the AI tools they deploy and the logic behind moderation outcomes. It would add to the EU’s broader push to tighten oversight of powerful tech platforms and increase accountability for decisions that affect public discourse.
The legislation is still in the planning stage, and the final scope may change during negotiations. But the direction is clear: Brussels wants greater visibility into how algorithmic systems influence what millions of people see online.
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