The European Parliament will vote on a controversial messaging app verification mechanism, previously rejected twice. Critics argue the proposal could pass through a procedural loophole.
Infact verdict: Mostly True (69/100).
The European Parliament is indeed set to vote on extending the messaging app verification mechanism, focusing on age verification and voluntary scanning for child sexual abuse material. This proposal has been rejected twice before, most recently in March 2026. The claim about the proposal passing if not opposed by an absolute majority of 360 deputies is accurate, as this threshold is used in specific legislative processes. Roberta Metsola's involvement in bringing the issue to the agenda is confirmed, although this is procedural. The opinion from the Greens and AfD about the proposal being an attempt to push a rejected law through a loophole is subjective and cannot be factually verified.
July 08, 2026Language: en5 claims analyzed
Individual Claims
92
True
Politics
The European Parliament will vote on extending the messaging app verification mechanism.
The European Parliament is confirmed to vote on extending the messaging app verification mechanism, focusing on age verification and voluntary scanning for child sexual abuse material. This is supported by multiple sources, including EDRi and The World in Maps.
Fact Check ScoreNone
Fact Check Weight0
Web Consensus Score90
Web Consensus Weight50
Source Quality Score80
Source Quality Weight25
Llm Reasoning Score85
Llm Reasoning Weight25
Weighted Total92
Evidence SummaryMultiple sources confirm the upcoming vote on the proposal.
The European Parliament has rejected the messaging app verification initiative twice before.
The European Parliament has indeed rejected the messaging app verification initiative twice, with the most recent rejection occurring in March 2026. This is corroborated by multiple sources, including Patrick Breyer and CADE.
Fact Check ScoreNone
Fact Check Weight0
Web Consensus Score95
Web Consensus Weight50
Source Quality Score85
Source Quality Weight25
Llm Reasoning Score90
Llm Reasoning Weight25
Weighted Total94
Evidence SummaryMultiple sources confirm the initiative was rejected twice.
The proposal can pass if not opposed by an absolute majority of at least 360 deputies.
The proposal can indeed pass if not opposed by an absolute majority of at least 360 deputies. This is a standard legislative process in the European Parliament, as confirmed by sources like Wikipedia and POLYAS.
Fact Check ScoreNone
Fact Check Weight0
Web Consensus Score80
Web Consensus Weight50
Source Quality Score75
Source Quality Weight25
Llm Reasoning Score80
Llm Reasoning Weight25
Weighted Total88
Evidence SummaryStandard legislative process confirmed by multiple sources.