Article 6 says Member states must ensure audiovisual services ‘do not contain any incitement to hatred’ based on race, sex, religion, nationality or other protected characteristics.
Article 9 prohibits media with ‘surreptitious’ communication or ‘subliminal’ techniques, to ‘prejudice respect for human dignity’, that would ‘promote any discrimination’, prejudice health and safety or ‘encourage behaviour grossly prejudicial to the protection of the environment’.
Article 28b requires that video-sharing platform providers protect (a) minors from content that "may impair their physical, mental or moral development", (b) the general public from content "containing incitement to violence or hatred", and (c) the general public from content whose dissemination is criminal in EU law, such as terrorism, child pornography or offences concerning racism or xenophobia.
The EU Commission proposed amending the Directive with a new "Media Freedom Act".
[1] This proposed a new European Board for Media Services with coordination and opinion giving powers, composed of member state regulator representatives.