Source: OJ L, 2024/2690, 18.10.2024

Current language: EN

Article 12 Significant incidents with regard to providers of online search engines


Summary What does Article 12 of the Cybersecurity measures and significant incidents for relevant entities say?

This article sets out the specific criteria that determine when an incident affecting an online search engine must be classified as significant.

It directly feeds into Article 3(1)(g), which establishes the broader framework for significant incident classification across all relevant entity types.

The thresholds cover two distinct dimensions: availability disruptions and compromises to data integrity, confidentiality, or authenticity, with the latter further distinguished by whether or not a suspectedly malicious action is involved.

Important points:

  • Providers of online search engines must assess incidents against user-impact thresholds of either 5% of Union users or 1 million Union users, whichever is smaller, to determine whether reporting obligations are triggered.
  • An incident involving a suspectedly malicious compromise of data integrity, confidentiality, or authenticity is significant regardless of the number of users affected.
  • Both complete unavailability and limited availability scenarios can trigger the significance threshold, meaning partial disruptions are not automatically exempt.

Springlex's summary of the article, a reading aid, not a substitute for the legal text.

With regard to providers of online search engines, an incident shall be considered significant under Article 3(1)(g) where it fulfils one or more of the following criteria:

  1. an online search engine is completely unavailable for more than 5 % of that online search engine’s users in the Union, or for more than 1 million of that online search engine’s users in the Union, whichever number is smaller;

  2. more than 5 % of an online search engine’s users in the Union, or more than 1 million of an online search engine’s users in the Union, whichever number is smaller, are impacted by limited availability of that online search engine;

  3. the integrity, confidentiality or authenticity of stored, transmitted or processed data related to the provision of an online search engine is compromised as a result of a suspectedly malicious action;

  4. the integrity, confidentiality or authenticity of stored, transmitted or processed data related to the provision of an online search engine is compromised with an impact on more than 5 % of that online search engine’s users in the Union, or on more than 1 million of that online search engine’s users in the Union, whichever number is smaller.

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