Europeans want decisive action against disinformation on the internet::More than half of all EU citizens doubt the truthfulness of the information they find online. Recognizing false content and actively responding to it is easier for the young and the educated. Almost nine out of ten Europeans feel tech companies and policymakers both have a responsibility to combat...
I think they might also mean "room for abuse" as in people abusing said guidelines to attack people or subjects they don't like though erroneous reporting and poor enforcement of those guidelines (you already see it happen with something like community notes), abuse can go both ways with something like this.
You also highlight an important point in that people who create the disinformation already know how to get around barriers and telling them what is and isn't explicitly will just make their job easier, so in essence such rules and guidelines only hurt anyone else, the people who would be on the receiving end of abusive reporting, or abuse of the correction systems.
I think they might also mean "room for abuse" as in people abusing said guidelines to attack people or subjects they don't like though erroneous reporting and poor enforcement of those guidelines (you already see it happen with something like community notes), abuse can go both ways with something like this.
You also highlight an important point in that people who create the disinformation already know how to get around barriers and telling them what is and isn't explicitly will just make their job easier, so in essence such rules and guidelines only hurt anyone else, the people who would be on the receiving end of abusive reporting, or abuse of the correction systems.