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Talking the Digital Fairness Act with Commissioner McGrath

I took part in a European Commission Youth Policy Dialogue in Ljubljana and sat down with EU Commissioner Michael McGrath to talk about the Digital Fairness Act, the EU's upcoming push to clean up how online services treat people. What stuck with me was that the conversation about the rules happened with the people they're meant to protect, not just about them.

Youth Policy Dialogue on the Digital Fairness Act with Commissioner Michael McGrath in Ljubljana
Open Q&A with the panel during the Digital Fairness Act dialogue, Commissioner McGrath listening
The open Q&A with the panel, Commissioner McGrath listening on the right.

What We Worked On

Instead of abstract talking points, we mapped out concrete asks across pricing, marketing practices, and digital contracts. A few themes kept coming up. Ban deceptive practices and dark patterns. Set standardised requirements so people actually understand what they're agreeing to. And price things in real currency instead of the in-app token systems built to hide how much you're really spending.

Working group mapping deceptive design and dark patterns for the Digital Fairness Act
In our working group, with the "Dark Patterns" board on the table and the Digital Fairness principles in hand.
A few moments from the day: the roundtables, the side conversations, the open discussion.

Why It Matters

So much of the modern web is built to nudge and pressure you into things: manipulative defaults, fake urgency, subscriptions that take one click to start and a support ticket to cancel. I build software, so I think a lot about where the line sits between good design and design that just exploits people. Getting to argue that line with the person actually shaping the legislation is not something I expected to be doing this year.

Eduard Hvizdak listening during a session of the Youth Policy Dialogue
Listening in during one of the sessions.

Final Thoughts

I left convinced that youth input on digital policy isn't just a box-ticking exercise. The people who grew up inside these systems tend to spot the manipulation fastest. Thanks to the European Commission and Commissioner Michael McGrath for actually listening.

Group photo of the young participants with Commissioner Michael McGrath in Ljubljana
The full group of young participants with Commissioner Michael McGrath in Ljubljana.

Youth Policy Dialogue: Digital Fairness Act · Ljubljana, Slovenia
With European Commissioner Michael McGrath · European Commission