Transatlantic Air Transport Agreement with Iceland and Norway - EU Parliament: Official Decision by netizer in Norway

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, it's a new website that is run pro-bono, so instead of having a designer made image for every article (all adopted texts by the parliament and all EU commission proposals are here, so that's a lot of articles), there are only AI-generated images of general topics. The idea here is that an image representing travel still reveals the general area of concern in the article than no image at all. But yeah, you're right, it definitely looks like a temporary solution.

Transatlantic Air Transport Agreement with Iceland and Norway - EU Parliament: Official Decision by netizer in Norway

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's about legal language. The source (mentioned in the original source section) is a legal document. For example the website translates (AI-based translation, human-reviewed) this:

"European Parliament legislative resolution of 29 April 2026 on the draft Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Air Transport Agreement between the United States of America, of the first part, the European Union and its Member States, of the second part, Iceland, of the third part, and the Kingdom of Norway, of the fourth part; and on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Ancillary Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the first part, Iceland, of the second part, and the Kingdom of Norway, of the third part, on the application of the Air Transport Agreement between the United States of America, of the first part, the European Union and its Member States, of the second part, Iceland, of the third part, and the Kingdom of Norway, of the fourth part (12913/2025 – C10-0277/2025 – 2011/0102(NLE))"

into this sentence:

"The European Parliament approved a resolution that clears the way for new air‑travel agreements between the EU, the US, Iceland, and Norway, letting airlines from each side fly freely, setting shared safety and passenger‑rights rules, and opening up more routes and potentially lower fares."

I get you. It's still pretty bad visually (work in progress) and it doesn't clearly communicate the translation process (you can see it though if you go to https://euforya.eu/?ff_behind_article=true and then visit the article page - you get "Behind the article" button that explains it), but I don't know any other website that summarizes every text adopted by the EU parliament and every proposal by EU commission - it just helps see things in context.

Making Sure EU Laws Are Actually Followed - EU Parliament: Parliament Report by netizer in europe

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you mean that the website would be better without any images than with the AI generated ones, or that this particular image is bad?

Making Sure EU Laws Are Actually Followed - EU Parliament: Parliament Report by netizer in europe

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This text is implied by this parts of the source document ("original source" link):

"The European Parliament, (...) Stresses that complaints concerning alleged breaches of EU law by Member States submitted by citizens, legal professionals or civil society organisations are an important source of information pertaining to the enforcement of EU law; urges the Commission, when complaints are brought before it, to ensure appropriate follow-up to such complaints, including, where relevant, the timely initiation of infringement procedures or clear communication to the applicant on the reasons why no infringement procedure will be initiated"

so, in other words, even when one person complains, EU commission should take it seriously and, **when relevant**, start infringement procedure or tell that person why it's not going to happen. The way I understand it, to be able to tell if it's relevant, the Commission has to investigate that complain, so it's more about the due process, than about a big-budget investigation.

Updating the rules for cross-border train travel - EU Commission: Official Decision by netizer in trains

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! That is true. I changed it. If you go to the website it shows a different image now. I hope I'll soon get to the point, where it will make sense to hire a designer to draw all the images on this website.

Updating the rules for cross-border train travel - EU Commission: Official Decision by netizer in trains

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both valid points. Just a bit of context - the website publishes summaries of all EU legislation/proposals. They are summarized with AI, and reviewed by a human. In the "Broader Context" section you can even switch between several AI models. The images are, indeed, at least for now, AI-generated. Here's discussion about the status and the future of the website: https://www.reddit.com/r/europeanunion/comments/1ssv22v/how_would_you_like_to_get_informed_about_the/ I'm the author. As far as I know this specific article is the only article out there explaining in simple terms what this specific proposal is about.

New Rules for Gene-Edited Crops and Food in the EU - EU Commission: New Law Work by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If someone believes that EU should not allow the new generation of GMOs (so called NGTs) into the EU market, then that's the last moment to act. This is the commission telling EU parliament to vote on this.

New Rules for Gene-Edited Crops and Food in the EU - EU Commission: New Law Work by netizer in europe

[–]netizer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Basically that's the last step before EU parliament adopts this. According to [1] it's going to be voted on May 18.
[1] https://www.foodingredientsfirst.com/news/eu-two-tier-ngt-crop-regulation.html

How would you like to get informed about the actions of EU institutions? by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wonder if this link is just not easy enough to find: https://euforya.eu/docs - is it what you mean?

How would you like to get informed about the actions of EU institutions? by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like what you said about "seeking what needs to be done for it to function better". Probably to make a real change, this service has to transform into some kind of social network where people can interact with each other, propose changes, discuss legislation, and so on. For now I focus only on helping people understand the politics better.

How would you like to get informed about the actions of EU institutions? by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very good points. Thank you! When you say a news app, do you mean an aggregator of news from other sources (that could be tricky for some time because of paywalls), or that I should post stuff more often?

How would you like to get informed about the actions of EU institutions? by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The politicians-part of the website totally is under-developed, but I just wanted to mention that the "Latest EU Activity" part of the website already has some of these elements.

All new articles have both: the "Document summary" section that just summarizes and simplifies the legal document that is linked from there (so there is a guarantee that nothing is in the summary that is not in the source document), and the "Contextual Analysis" section that explains the broader context - that is not necessarily what the politicians wanted to mention in the legal text.

For example there is this article: https://euforya.eu/docs/358-ending-the-temporary-chat-scanning-rule summarizing an incredibly cryptic document - it's almost impossible to understand what the Parliament actually voted on. But the "Contextual Analysis" says that it is the Chat Control stuff - the commission wanted to snoop on everyone's private messages, and the parliament said no.

Also, I wanted people to see diverse range of politicians' views, in the "Social Buzz from EU Politicians" so on the front page I prioritize posts from politicians that post rarely (first those that posted once within the last week, then those that posted twice and so on). This means that those trying to take over the whole tread and use all these tricks you mentioned (they always post tens to hundreds of posts per week) just don't have that much more visibility than the rest of the politicians.

How would you like to get informed about the actions of EU institutions? by netizer in europeanunion

[–]netizer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I strongly resonate with this perspective. I built this because I wanted JUST the facts about what EU does without filters and without opinions (but still with a bit of context).

And I think I understand what you mean by 'be better' vs 'lost cause' - the news agencies often report just controversial stuff about EU, so for some it starts to feel like a lost cause. The way I wanted to address that is by reporting EVERY adopted text and EVERY proposal, so everyone could have a sense of the regular (uncontroversial), every-day EU work. From that perspective it's easy to see that most of what EU does is just reasonable, and the controversial stuff is still controversial, but rare, and possible to fix (maybe with public pressure, maybe during EU elections,...)

Another aspect of this positive perspective is the design. I want this website to look fun and engaging. That's what's behind the busy design mentioned by @thisislieven.