I was not referring to content filters but what they have done in Europe, especially concerning article 13. They said that it's a communication to the public even if the work has been uploaded by a user.
Right now, if I put something online, it's protected. If it's user-generated content, the platform doesn't need to pay and they don't need to have a licence. So the change is that they will need to have a licence and to pay the right holders, even for user-generated content, and they will have to be more transparent. Those companies are not transparent about what's being used, and it's the content of the right holders and the creators that's there, and we don't know what's happening with it.