Op-eds social mediatechnology When platforms become regulators of democracy Relevant News When platforms become regulators of democracy 7 July 2026 French far-right leader Le Pen handed three-year sentence, two years suspended 7 July 2026 Cocaine smuggler’s risky delivery method backfires at Larnaca airport 7 July 2026 newsroom 7 July 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber By Petros Papadopoulos* Meta Platforms’ decision to suspend advertisements concerning political, electoral, and social issues in the European Union from 2025 is not merely a business decision. It is a development that strikes at the heart of modern democracy and raises fundamental questions about freedom of expression in the digital age. At a time when public discourse takes place primarily through digital platforms, access to the tools for promoting political and social messages is not a mere technical matter. It is an issue of democratic power. Whoever controls the flow and visibility of information also controls, to a significant extent, the ability to participate in public debate. The complete prohibition of political advertising in the European Union creates a new and unequal reality. Citizens, civil society organizations, and political actors are deprived of a communication tool that remains available in other democratic countries. This cannot be regarded as insignificant, as it directly affects the balance of public expression. Within this context, a particularly important issue emerges: the potential infringement of the principle of equality in public discourse arising from the differing treatment of the European Union compared with other democratic legal systems. While political, electoral, and social issue advertising has effectively been eliminated within the European Union through Meta’s decision, such advertising remains permissible in other major democracies, including the United States, subject to transparency and regulatory oversight. This distinction creates an environment of unequal access to the fundamental tools of political communication in the digital age. Political parties, organizations, and citizens within the European Union do not enjoy the same opportunity to strengthen their public presence through targeted digital advertising as their counterparts in other countries. This raises legitimate questions as to whether the principle of equal access to public discourse is, in practice, being adequately safeguarded. In this sense, equality concerns not only the theoretical freedom to express one’s views but also the material and technological conditions necessary to exercise that freedom. When the rules governing access to channels for disseminating political speech differ according to geography, the capacity to influence public opinion becomes unevenly distributed, potentially affecting the democratic balance within the digital public sphere. At the same time, serious questions arise regarding the limits of freedom of expression. If political communication is restricted or prohibited through the principal digital channels of public information, freedom of speech risks becoming more formal than substantive. Supporters of such restrictions argue that they are necessary to protect democracy from disinformation, manipulation, and undue influence. However, the question remains whether the blanket prohibition of a political communication tool ultimately strengthens democracy or instead limits democratic participation. The issue becomes even more complex when one considers that digital platforms now function as de facto regulators of the public sphere without being subject to the same mechanisms of democratic accountability as public institutions. This gives rise to a new form of power: algorithmic power. The fundamental issue is not whether rules should exist. The crucial question is who establishes those rules, under what democratic legitimacy, and according to which criteria. As long as these questions remain unresolved, concerns will continue to grow that freedom of expression is gradually shifting from a fundamental right to a form of controlled access. Consequently, democracy today is challenged not only by disinformation but also by control over the very channels through which public opinion is formed. *Petros Papadopoulos is an advocate Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News French far-right leader Le Pen handed three-year sentence, two years suspended Cocaine smuggler’s risky delivery method backfires at Larnaca airport Cyprus-linked spyware executives convicted in Greece as Predatorgate victims sue for €1m each France to extradite Lithuanian over occupied Cyprus property usurpation Cyprus finances improved most since pandemic, ESM finds Fourth tourist remanded over Ayia Napa assault, puncher identified Pyla complex sewage threatens public health, Oroklini residents say (photos) Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.
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