Digital Services Act
Le Digital Services Act (Règlement (UE) 2022/2065, DSA) est la loi européenne pour services intermédiaires en ligne. Il modernise responsabilité hébergeurs, impose due diligence plateformes en ligne, obligations renforcées gestion risque pour très grandes plateformes (VLOP ≥ 45M utilisateurs actifs/mois UE) et très grands moteurs recherche (VLOSE). En vigueur : 16 novembre 2022 ; application VLOP/VLOSE 25 août 2023, autres services 17 février 2024. France : ARCOM coordinateur services numériques (Digital Services Coordinator) + CNIL + DGCCRF ; Commission UE supervise direct VLOP/VLOSE.
Free EU Compliance CheckerWhat does DSA require and when does it apply?
DSA applies to Social Media and Marketplaces organisations across all EU member states. The key deadline is February 17, 2024 (all platforms). Non-compliance carries a maximum penalty of Up to 6% of global turnover (VLOPs/VLOSEs); per member state for others. Core obligations include remove illegal content upon valid notice and provide transparent advertising registers.
- Remove illegal content upon valid notice
- Provide transparent advertising registers
- Disclose algorithmic recommender system logic
- Conduct annual risk assessments (VLOPs)
- Allow third-party auditing (VLOPs/VLSEs)
| Deadline | February 17, 2024 (all platforms) |
| Max fine | Up to 6% of global turnover (VLOPs/VLOSEs); per member state for others |
| Primary sectors | Social Media, Marketplaces, Search Engines |
DSA: Up to 6% of global turnover (VLOPs/VLOSEs); per member state for others max fine
DSA applies to Social Media and Marketplaces organisations in all EU member states. Key deadline: February 17, 2024 (all platforms).
Source: Official Journal of the European Union — Digital Services Act
Who does DSA apply to?
Le DSA impose des obligations en cascade : règles de base pour tous les services intermédiaires offerts dans l'UE ; règles supplémentaires pour les services d'hébergement ; règles complémentaires pour les plateformes en ligne ; et le niveau le plus strict pour les VLOP/VLOSE désignés.
- Services intermédiaires : simple transport, mise en cache, hébergement, offrant leurs services dans l'UE (indépendamment de l'établissement)
- Hébergeurs : mécanismes de notification et d'action, motivations des décisions de modération de contenus
- Plateformes en ligne : signaleurs de confiance, transparence des systèmes de recommandation, interdiction des interfaces trompeuses (dark patterns)
- VLOP/VLOSE (≥ 45 M d'utilisateurs actifs mensuels dans l'UE) : évaluations annuelles des risques systémiques, audits indépendants, réponse aux crises
What are the penalties for DSA non-compliance?
Les sanctions pour les services intermédiaires généraux et les plateformes en ligne sont fixées par les États membres ; la Commission est habilitée à infliger directement des amendes aux VLOP/VLOSE désignés. Des astreintes périodiques peuvent s'ajouter.
| Maximum fine | Up to 6% of global annual turnover for VLOPs/VLOSEs; member states set penalties for other intermediaries |
When does DSA apply?
Le DSA est entré en vigueur le 16 novembre 2022. Il s'applique aux VLOP/VLOSE désignés depuis le 25 août 2023, et à l'ensemble des autres services concernés depuis le 17 février 2024.
- 2022-11-16 — Entry into force
- 2023-04-25 — First VLOP/VLOSE designations
- 2023-08-25 — Obligations apply to designated VLOPs/VLOSEs
- 2024-02-17 — Obligations apply to all other in-scope services
Seuil au-delà duquel la Commission européenne peut désigner une plateforme en ligne comme très grande plateforme en ligne (VLOP) ou un moteur de recherche comme très grand moteur de recherche en ligne (VLOSE) — déclenchant le niveau le plus strict des obligations DSA.
Règlement (UE) 2022/2065, article 33(1)
February 17, 2024 (all platforms)
Up to 6% of global turnover (VLOPs/VLOSEs); per member state for others
Social Media, Marketplaces, Search Engines
Seuil au-delà duquel la Commission européenne peut désigner une plateforme en ligne comme très grande plateforme en ligne (VLOP) ou un moteur de recherche comme très grand moteur de recherche en ligne (VLOSE) — déclenchant le niveau le plus strict des obligations DSA.
Règlement (UE) 2022/2065, article 33(1)
| Official name | Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 of the European Parliament and of the Council on a Single Market For Digital Services (Digital Services Act) |
| Reg. No. | (EU) 2022/2065 |
| CELEX | 32022R2065 |
| Type | regulation |
| In force | 2022-11-16 |
| Applies from | 2024-02-17 |
| Max fine | Up to 6% of global annual turnover for VLOPs/VLOSEs; member states set penalties for other intermediaries |
| Authorities | European Commission (for VLOPs/VLOSEs) (EU) National Digital Services Coordinators (DSCs) (member-state) European Board for Digital Services (EU) |
| Source | (EU) 2022/2065 — EUR-Lex Official Journal |
How do I comply with DSA?
- Remove illegal content upon valid notice
- Provide transparent advertising registers
- Disclose algorithmic recommender system logic
- Conduct annual risk assessments (VLOPs)
- Allow third-party auditing (VLOPs/VLSEs)
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Who is subject to the EU Digital Services Act?
- The DSA (Regulation 2022/2065) applies to all digital intermediary services offered to users in the EU — regardless of where the provider is established. Obligations scale by service type and size: mere conduit and caching services have minimal obligations; hosting services and online platforms must implement notice-and-action mechanisms and transparency reporting; Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs) and Very Large Online Search Engines (VLOSEs) with over 45 million average monthly EU users face enhanced obligations enforced directly by the European Commission. Small and micro enterprises (under 50 employees, under €10M turnover) are exempt from certain obligations, including complaint-handling and out-of-court dispute settlement requirements. All obligations applied from 17 February 2024.
- What content moderation obligations does the DSA impose on online platforms?
- Online platforms under the DSA must: operate a notice-and-action mechanism allowing users to report illegal content; process valid notices expeditiously and notify users of removal decisions with reasons; provide a non-discriminatory internal complaints mechanism for content removal decisions; offer access to out-of-court dispute settlement bodies; cooperate with trusted flaggers — vetted organisations that report illegal content at scale; and publish transparency reports on content moderation every six months. Platforms may not use dark patterns that undermine user choices. Advertising cannot target minors or use sensitive data categories (health, religion, sexual orientation, political views) as targeting criteria.
- What obligations apply to Very Large Online Platforms under the DSA?
- VLOPs and VLOSEs with over 45 million monthly EU users face enhanced DSA obligations enforced by the European Commission, not national coordinators. Core obligations: annual systemic risk assessments covering illegal content, fundamental rights, electoral processes, and public health; independent audits of risk assessments and mitigation measures; real-time data access for vetted researchers; algorithmic transparency including a non-profiling-based recommendation option for users; and advertising transparency registers. During elections or public emergencies, the Commission can impose crisis response measures. Non-compliance fines reach 6% of global annual turnover; repeated infringement may result in temporary access restrictions.
For informational purposes only. This is not legal advice — consult qualified legal counsel.
Last verified: · Source: EUR-Lex 32022R2065 · Editorial policy