The Digital Services Act (DSA) introduces a harmonized regulatory framework for online services in the EU. Its primary objective is to make the digital environment safe, transparent, and predictable, particularly where large-scale user-generated content is concerned.
Icecat’s activities differ from those of typical online platforms. We provide structured product information sourced from brand owners and manufacturers, distributed to retailers, distributors, and other partners. This type of content is already governed by consumer protection law, product safety law, and intellectual property law, and rarely involves the types of risks (e.g. hate speech, extremist material, child sexual abuse) the DSA was designed to address.
Nonetheless, Icecat has reviewed the DSA carefully and gives an update about its activities in the light of the articles relevant to hosting services (Articles 11–18). By doing so, Icecat demonstrates its commitment to transparency, trust, and accountability in digital trade.
Icecat’s role as a global product content provider is fundamentally different from that of platforms hosting unregulated user-generated material. For this reason, the DSA’s strictest transparency and moderation provisions do not apply to Icecat.
Nevertheless, Icecat adheres to the principles of the DSA by maintaining transparent terms, rapid reporting and correction processes, clear responsibilities, and appropriate escalation procedures.
Read further: Icecat, Digital Services Act, DSA, Icecat