
Member states seek to revive a temporary child-safety tool after Parliament rejected the measure in March
EU governments are working to revive a temporary legal framework that allows messaging providers to detect child sexual abuse material, revisiting the sensitive issue of balancing child protection, private communications, and power between the Council and the European Parliament.
EU ambassadors decided on 26 June to proceed with a temporary extension of the framework, as reported by Euronews. This decision follows less than three months after MEPs rejected extending the interim derogation from ePrivacy rules, which permitted some online services to voluntarily scan communications for child sexual abuse material.
The decision is politically sensitive as Parliament had already completed its first reading on the issue. In March, MEPs voted 311 to 228, with 92 abstentions, against prolonging the derogation. Parliament stated that the temporary regulation would expire after 3 April 2026, as negotiations with the Council did not yield an agreement.
A child-safety gap, or a privacy red line?
The interim regime was established in 2021 as a temporary solution while the EU developed permanent rules to combat child sexual abuse online. Its expiry has created a divide among policymakers: some warn of a legal gap in child-protection efforts, while others argue that broad scanning powers could normalize surveillance of private messages.
This tension has influenced the broader EU debate for years. Child-safety advocates argue that platforms need legal certainty to detect and report abuse, including grooming and image-based exploitation. Digital-rights groups and privacy-focused lawmakers contend that scanning private communications, especially with end-to-end encryption, poses serious risks to confidentiality, cybersecurity, and fundamental rights.
The European Parliament’s March statement emphasized that its preferred approach was narrower than the Commission’s proposal, advocating for a shorter duration and more targeted safeguards. The Parliament vote did not conclude the legislative process, but it intensified the institutional dispute over the extent of temporary detection powers.
Permanent law still unresolved
The renewed Council initiative coincides with ongoing EU negotiations on a long-term regulation intended to replace temporary measures. This permanent framework is expected to address platform risk assessments, removal obligations, reporting systems, and the role of a future EU center on child sexual abuse.
However, the permanent law has been challenging as it touches on two urgent public interests: protecting children from serious abuse and safeguarding everyone’s right to private communication. A sustainable compromise must demonstrate that detection measures are legal, targeted, proportionate, and independently supervised.
The broader child-protection agenda is progressing. Earlier this week, The European Times reported on a separate provisional EU agreement to tighten child abuse laws, including provisions for AI-generated abuse material, sextortion, and longer limitation periods for survivors seeking justice.
This parallel file indicates broad institutional agreement that Europe’s legal framework must adapt to digital abuse forms. The key question is whether private-message detection can be designed to protect children without compromising the privacy and security protections relied on by journalists, activists, lawyers, families, and ordinary users.
Procedure now becomes part of the story
Parliament’s rejection of the temporary extension in March means the latest Council move is both a policy and procedural dispute. If member states proceed, lawmakers are likely to question whether the Council is attempting to revive a measure that Parliament has already politically rejected.
For families affected by online abuse, the institutional friction may seem distant from the urgency of removing harmful material and identifying offenders. For privacy advocates, however, the procedure is significant because temporary powers can become entrenched before full safeguards are agreed.
The next stage depends on whether the Council and Parliament can negotiate without disrupting the permanent CSAM regulation. Until then, the EU is caught between two responsibilities it cannot abandon













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