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No chat monitoring: EU foregoes chat surveillance

by Milan
October 31, 2025
EU Chat Control

Image: Shutterstock / Gorodenkoff

The European Union's planned chat monitoring is definitively off the table. The EU has decided against the blanket search of private chat messages. After lengthy and controversial discussions, the Danish EU Council Presidency decided to remove the mandatory monitoring of private communications from the planned laws to combat child pornography. Instead, online platforms will still be allowed to voluntarily implement systems for detecting child pornography.

The debate surrounding chat monitoring has sparked heated clashes between data protection and child protection in recent years. While proponents prioritized child protection above all else, critics warned of an unprecedented intrusion into privacy. Now, the EU has reached a compromise intended to partially satisfy both sides. This step marks the end of a long political stalemate and illustrates the difficulty of maintaining a balance between security and freedom in a digital society.

The EU refrains from indiscriminate surveillance.

Random chat monitoring, originally intended as part of a legislative package to combat child sexual abuse, will not be implemented. After years of negotiations, the Danish Presidency of the Council of the EU decided to scrap the mandatory monitoring of private chat messages. This means that the mass scanning of communication content remains prohibited.

Germany, in particular, had clearly opposed chat monitoring during the talks. Federal Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig made it clear that there would be no agreement to blanket surveillance of private messages.

Denmark is focusing on agreement rather than stagnation.

Danish Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard explained that abandoning chat monitoring was necessary to reach an agreement at the EU level. Current EU rules on combating child pornography expire in April. Without a new compromise, Hummelgaard said, the EU risked being left without a legal basis for combating online child abuse for an extended period. He stated that this was simply unacceptable.

The minister admitted that the new rules would not bring about the major breakthrough in the fight against sexual abuse that had been hoped for. Nevertheless, the compromise was better than a step backward.

Voluntary measures remain permitted

The compromise now agreed upon is similar to the currently applicable regulations. Online platforms may continue to use technologies to detect and report child pornography – however, this is on a voluntary basis. No legal obligation or court order is foreseen.

Large services like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp already report suspicious content to the relevant authorities on a voluntary basis. This practice will continue to be permitted. The EU Commission had originally planned to legally require providers to automatically scan private messages to detect abusive material.

Data privacy concerns were the deciding factor.

Data protection advocates had sharply criticized the planned chat monitoring. They saw it as a blanket suspicion against all EU citizens and a dangerous precedent for surveillance in the digital sphere. The automatic scanning of private messages would have meant that every communication would potentially be monitored – regardless of whether there was any suspicion or not.

A report by the British Internet Watch Foundation revealed that around 62 percent of the world's identified child sexual abuse material is allegedly stored on servers within the EU. Despite these alarming figures, many experts considered the widespread monitoring of private chats to be the wrong approach. They argued that it would not combat the perpetrators but rather weaken the fundamental rights of all citizens.

Political signal with impact

The compromise reached shows that the EU is prepared to draw boundaries when fundamental rights are at stake. While the fight against child abuse is a top priority, it should not come at the expense of privacy. Denmark's Justice Minister Hummelgaard emphasized that the compromise is not a perfect solution, but the best option under the circumstances.

For many member states, the abandonment of chat monitoring is a victory for data protection. At the same time, the responsibility to effectively protect children online remains. The EU is relying on voluntary cooperation between platforms and authorities rather than on legally mandated monitoring obligations.

New direction: Collaboration instead of chat control

With its decision against chat monitoring, the EU has ended one of the most controversial digital debates of recent years. The compromise relies on voluntary participation rather than coercion, and on cooperation rather than surveillance. This ensures that privacy is protected while the fight against online abuse can continue.

With this decision, the EU demonstrates that protecting children and protecting fundamental rights need not be mutually exclusive – as long as political common sense and technological responsibility go hand in hand. (Image: Shutterstock / Gorodenkoff)

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