Following the European Parliament’s approval of the new 'Audiovisual Media Services Directive' on 29 November 2007, member states have until the end of 2009 to apply the revised standards to all "TV-like services", including web-streamed TV programmes.
The most important changes brought in by the new text are:
- US-style product placement – a currently illegal practice in most member states, through which brand marketeers pay for their products to be visibly used and displayed in TV productions – for example with the programme's hero boasting his favourite beer or car brand – will now be allowed. However, the placement of some products, including cigarettes and medicines, will remain forbidden. The directive also stipulates that viewers must be informed of product placement in a programme by the use of a signal at the start and end of the show, as well as after commercial breaks. Hidden ads will also be banned in news and current affairs programmes, children's TV, documentaries and advice programmes.
- A daily three-hour maximum limit on advertising in TV broadcasts is lifted, although an hourly limit of 12 minutes per hour remains. Also, more frequent breaks in films will be allowed – every 30 minutes instead of the current 45 minutes. Only programmes that are less than half an hour long will be spared interruptions (currently it is 35 minutes).
- Children's advertising will be subject to a code of conduct that, for instance, limits junk food commercials aimed at children.
- Ensuring TV access for disabled people will be an obligation.
Member states will continue to be able to introduce more stringent rules, although these will be subject to the so-called "country-of-origin" principle, whereby broadcasters only have to respect the laws of the country where they are based, and not those to which they broadcast. This means, for instance, that a programme made in a country where product placement is allowed could not be blocked in a country that chooses to ban such forms of hidden advertising.



