Reactions to the Digital Services Act have been mixed, with several academics, journalists, and human rights organizations welcoming an effort to regulate platforms and create consumer protections for its users. Others do not see the laws as going far enough, while the companies regulated by the laws and right-wing and libertarian politicians and journalists criticize the extent of its regulation. Prior to its implementation, some academics have expressed concerns that the Digital Services Act might be too rigid and prescribed, excessively focused on individual content decisions or vague risk assessments. The
European Federation of Journalists asked EU legislators to further increase the transparency of platforms' recommendation systems via the DSA.
Mike Masnick criticised the act for not including provisions that would have required a court order for the removal of illegal content. The DSA was welcomed by some EU media. In January 2022, the editorial board of
The Washington Post stated that the U.S. could learn from these rules, while Frances Haugen stated that it could set a "gold standard" of regulation worldwide. Tech journalist
Casey Newton has argued that the DSA will shape US tech policy. Mike Masnick of
Techdirt praised the DSA for ensuring the right to pay for digital services anonymously.
Human Rights Watch has welcomed the transparency and user remedies but called for an end to abusive surveillance and profiling.
Amnesty International has welcomed many aspects of the proposal in terms of fundamental rights balance, but also asked for further restrictions on advertising. Advocacy organisation
Avaaz has compared the Digital Services Act to the Paris Agreement for climate change. Following the
2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel,
Thierry Breton wrote public letters to
X,
Meta Platforms,
TikTok, and
YouTube on how their platforms complied with the DSA regarding content related to the conflict and upcoming elections. The
Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab reported that Breton's letters did not follow DSA processes, and digital rights group
Access Now criticised Breton's letters for drawing a "false equivalence" between illegal content and disinformation. Tech companies have frequently criticized the Digital Services Act (DSA) for what they consider to be burdensome regulations and lack of clarity. They have also faced accusations of lobbying to weaken some of the DSA's more stringent provisions, particularly those related to bans on targeted advertising. Notably, Google CEO Sundar Pichai issued a high-profile apology to EU Commissioner Thierry Breton after a leaked internal document revealed Google's 60-day strategy to lobby against the DSA, including efforts to enlist U.S. allies to oppose Breton's regulatory push. US politicians charged that the legislation unfairly targets US-based companies and, in 2025, several officials in the Trump administration, most notably
JD Vance, began alleging the DSA was being used for "censoring free speech and targeting political opponents". His statements were contested by, among others,
Michael McFaul, formerly U.S. ambassador to Russia, who told
Politico Vance's remarks were "insulting" and "just empirically not true". Another critic of Vance's speech was the German Defense Minister at that time,
Boris Pistorius, who called Vance's remarks about Europe "not acceptable". Libertarian professor
Marcello Ferrada de Noli expressed concern that the DSA could enable censorship if regulations permit the classification of journalistic or dissident critiques of European Union leadership as hate speech. On 23 December 2025, United States secretary of state
Marco Rubio sanctioned former commissioner
Thierry Breton, who led the drafting of the legislative proposal. Despite the fact that Breton left his office in September 2024, Breton's U.S. assets are frozen, and he is
persona non grata in the
United States, thus forbidden to enter the
territories of the United States by the
Trump administration, "over what it said was 'censorship' and coercion of US social media platforms".
The Guardian reported that "the sanctions are being seen as the latest attack on European regulations that target hate speech and misinformation". In January 2026, Polish president
Karol Nawrocki refused to sign, thus effectively vetoing, a bill that would designate a responsible authority for DSA enforcement in Poland. Nawrocki said regarding his decision, "The most effective way to take away freedom is not by banning speech, but by imposing a single, officially accepted version of reality", and that "
Orwell’s
Ministry of Truth is a warning symbol." In February 2026 Finnish parliamentarian
Päivi Räsänen condemned the act as "European style censorship", where "anyone, anywhere could find themselves silenced for peacefully expressing their faith or opinion."
Politico reported in February 2026 that as a result of outside pressures, DSA workshops have become closed-door events at the request of companies. Prabhat Agarwal, the official heading the European Commission's DSA enforcement team, described their work as "more adversarial" than before and stated his team had begun using disappearing messages on
Signal. == Impacts ==