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The EU has invited the public to help prepare guidelines for the protection of children online Alamy Stock Photo

EU launches investigation into four porn sites on suspicion they fail to prevent children's access

Violations, if proven, risk fines of up to six percent of a firm’s global turnover.

THE EU HAS begun an investigation into four pornography platforms over suspicions they are failing to stop children accessing adult content, in breach of the Digital Services Act.

The European Commission said its investigations into Pornhub, Stripchat, XNXX, and XVideos “focus on the risks for the protection of minors, including those linked to the absence of effective age verification measures”.

The commission accused the platforms of not having “appropriate” age verification tools to prevent children from being exposed to porn.

An AFP correspondent only had to click a button stating they were older than 18 without any further checks to gain access to each of the four platforms.

The commission found the four platforms did not have “appropriate and proportionate measures to ensure a high level of privacy, safety and security for minors”.

They also did not have the measures in place to prevent negative effects on children as well as users’ mental and physical wellbeing, the commission said.

“Online platforms must ensure that the rights and best interests of children are central to the design and functioning of their services,” it added.

The EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) forces the world’s biggest tech companies to do more to protect European users online and has strict rules to safeguard children and ensure their privacy and security.

Under the law, “very large” online platforms with at least 45 million monthly active users in the EU have even greater obligations, and they are regulated by the commission rather than national authorities.

Fearful over children’s access to adult content, the commission said it will work with national authorities to make sure smaller porn platforms apply the same rules.

“Our priority is to protect minors and allow them to navigate safely online. Together with the digital service coordinators in the member states we are determined to tackle any potential harm to young online users,” EU digital tsar Henna Virkkunen said.

The EU also said it would remove Stripchat from the list of “very large” platforms since it now had fewer than 45 million monthly active users on average, with its probe to focus on the period when it fell under its purview.

Brussels stressed the launch of formal proceedings does not prejudge the investigation’s outcome and there is no deadline for its completion.

Violations, if proven however, risk fines of up to six percent of a firm’s global turnover. Platforms found guilty of serious and repeated violations can also be banned from operating in Europe.

The EU in parallel has invited the public, including parents, to help prepare guidelines for the protection of children online and is developing an age-verification app.

The DSA, which has a wide remit, sits within the EU’s powerful legal weaponry to regulate Big Tech.

Brussels has launched a wave of probes under the DSA since 2023, including into Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, as well as Elon Musk’s X social media platform and TikTok.

- © AFP 2025

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