The Polish government has approved a major amendment to the Act on the Provision of Electronic Services, a legal framework that will implement the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) domestically.
It sounds technical, but the implications are anything but. From parents trying to keep their children safe online, to journalists, creators, and e-commerce owners. Everyone will feel its effects. The new law promises faster action against illegal content and better protection for users. Yet, at the same time, it raises questions about freedom of speech, proportionality, and the fine line between moderation and censorship.
What’s happening – in a nutshell
The amendment gives Polish authorities and online platforms a legal, fast-track procedure to block illegal content (like human trafficking, identity theft, child exploitation, and online fraud). It also creates a formal appeals process for users whose posts are removed and divides oversight among three institutions:
In short: it’s the Polish “translation” of the EU’s DSA – setting up national rules, regulators, and timelines.
The heart of the reform – and why it’s controversial
Fast-track takedown orders : Until now, platforms themselves decided what to remove. Under the new law, UKE or KRRiT could issue administrative orders to block specific illegal content – and providers must comply “without undue delay.”
That speed is both a strength and a risk. When a live stream of a child abuse incident or a pirated football match appears, hours matter. But when speech is political or borderline controversial, that same speed can feel like a guillotine.
The “safety valve” – restoring content: If a platform wrongly removes content, the coordinator (UKE/KRRiT) can order its restoration. In theory, this protects free speech. In practice, it depends on how fast and transparently authorities act – and whether they have the staff and tools to review thousands of cases.
Clearer user rights: Users will have a defined appeals path: first to the platform, then – if unsatisfied – to a national authority. This mirrors the DSA’s logic of layered dispute resolution and “trusted flaggers.”
Good news: more structure, less chaos:
Bad news: administrative clocks tick faster than human ones – your appeal might succeed only after the damage is done (lost reach, revenue, or relevance).
Who watches the platforms
Three regulators will share oversight. UKE coordinates Poland’s entire DSA framework, UOKiK handles consumer cases, and KRRiT focuses on video platforms. The real challenge? Whether they’ll have enough funding, expertise, and tech to enforce these rules effectively.
Why lawyers and watchdogs say “be careful”
Poland’s Ombudsman, Marcin Wiącek, warns that administrative decisions on matters touching freedom of speech are inherently risky. He worries about limited participation of the content creator in proceedings and that administrative courts may not be equipped to weigh human-rights impacts.
He stops short of calling it censorship, but notes the potential for “disproportionate effects and abuse.”
The bigger picture – what’s European, what’s Polish
This isn’t Poland inventing something new out of thin air. The Digital Services Act already requires each EU member state to establish national procedures for handling illegal content (Article 9). These procedures can be judicial or administrative. Poland is choosing the administrative path – faster, but more sensitive politically.
So the real debate isn’t whether to act, but how to act without crossing the line between efficiency and overreach.
The good side – why many experts welcome the move
The dark side – what could go wrong
The bottom line
Poland’s DSA implementation is a turning point for the country’s digital ecosystem. It promises safer, more transparent online spaces – but also gives the state unprecedented influence over what stays up or comes down.
For ordinary users, it could mean less exposure to harmful content. For creators, it’s both protection and pressure. For regulators, it’s the biggest test yet of whether a democracy can regulate the internet without stifling it.
The bill now moves to Parliament – where its final shape will show whether Poland leans toward safety with freedom or control in disguise.