数字内容指令对在线平台服务条款的影响

IF 0.3 Q3 LAW
Katarzyna Wiśniewska, Przemysław Pałka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

旨在促进数字单一市场和改善消费者保护的数字内容指令2019/770 (DCD)于2022年1月1日生效。本文介绍了对100个在线平台服务条款(ToS)的研究结果,旨在评估该指令的影响。通过将黑字分析与定性和定量实证研究相结合,该贡献揭示了指令的假设,批判性地评估了其逻辑,并为欧洲立法者提出了监管建议。我们的主要发现是,大量被研究的合同(28%)不包含对所提供数字内容的描述。许多这样做的公司,其描述都非常模糊。因此,指令的中心制度——与合同的一致性——可能没有立法者假设的那么有价值。尽管DCD引入了“客观”符合性的概念,但我们表明,在数字环境中,它可能会降低法律确定性,违背指令的目的之一。此外,我们还展示了所分析的ToS如何经常无法满足其他要求,例如检索内容的权利或防止单方面删除内容的保护。这就引出了有关监管方法、所选择的执法方案的效力,以及更普遍地说,整个欧盟私法中使用的执法方案的问题。为了解决这些问题,我们建议在设计未来保护在线消费者的措施时进行更多的实证研究,并考虑用《数字服务法》(Digital Services Act)等行政监督来补充现有的执法方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of the Digital Content Directive on online platforms’ Terms of Service
Abstract The Digital Content Directive 2019/770 (the DCD), aiming to foster the Digital Single Market and improve consumer protection, became applicable on 1 January 2022. This article presents the results of the study of 100 Terms of Service (ToS) of online platforms, conducted to evaluate the Directive’s impact. By combining black letter analysis with qualitative and quantitative empirical research, the contribution sheds new light on the Directive’s assumptions, critically assesses its logic, and makes regulatory suggestions for European lawmakers. Our central finding is that a significant number of the studied contracts (28 per cent) do not contain descriptions of the digital content offered. Many of those that do, keep the descriptions extremely vague. Hence, the central institution of the Directive—conformity with the contract—might be less valuable than the lawmakers have assumed. Even though the DCD introduces the concept of ‘objective’ conformity, we show how, in the digital environment, it might lower legal certainty, defeating one of the purposes of the Directive. Moreover, we also demonstrate how the analysed ToS often fail to meet other requirements, such as the right to retrieve one’s content or the protection from unilateral content deletion. This begs the question about the regulatory approach, the efficacy of the chosen enforcement scheme and, more generally, the enforcement schemes used throughout the EU’s private law. To remedy these problems, we suggest engaging in more empirical research when designing future measures to protect consumers online and considering supplementing the existing enforcement schemes with administrative oversight like the one in the Digital Services Act.
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