Brussels, 10 March 2026
For more than a decade, online services have voluntarily deployed well-established technologies to detect, report and remove child sexual abuse material (CSAM). These systems, while privacy-preserving, are a foundational layer of protection for children online.
Today, these protections exist because the temporary derogation from certain provisions of the ePrivacy Directive (“the Interim Regulation”) provides the legal certainty that allows companies to continue voluntary detection efforts.
That protection is at risk.
The Steering Group of the European Child Sexual Abuse Legislation Advocacy Group (ECLAG) and DOT Europe urge Members of the European Parliament to ensure the swift adoption of the extension of the temporary derogation without weakening its scope.
The extension proposed by the European Commission – and supported by Member States – is simple: it maintains the current legal framework so that companies can continue voluntarily detecting, reporting and removing child sexual abuse material while negotiations on the long-term Child Sexual Abuse Regulation continue.
Proposals in the European Parliament to restrict this extension equate to instructing platforms to dismantle core elements of their child protection systems. Limiting voluntary detection only to previously identified material, and removing the ability to detect new abuse material or grooming, would represent a profound step backwards for child safety with immediate and tangible consequences for child protection:
We have seen what happens when legal certainty disappears. In the period before the Interim Regulation was adopted, reports of child sexual abuse from EU-based companies to the US National Center for Missing and Exploited Children dropped by 58% because companies lacked a clear legal basis to continue detection. A similar collapse in reporting must not happen again.
The scale of online child sexual abuse is only growing and new technologies – including AI tools capable of generating photorealistic illegal images and videos – are accelerating the threat landscape. Its purpose is to maintain the status quo until a permanent framework is agreed.
ECLAG and DOT Europe call on Members of the European Parliament to:
Turning off these systems will not stop abuse. It will mean abuse continues unobstructed and children go unseen. We urge parliamentarians to prevent the deconstruction of child protection mechanisms that have helped safeguard children online for more than a decade.