The interesting part for me is the one talking about regulation of virtual currencies (I still fail to capture the "inmense potential" of private blockchains, so the rest of the article was not too interesting for me):
[...]In this proposal only those engaged in exchanging between virtual and fiat currencies are included.
Virtual currency to virtual currency exchanges are not covered (for example, Bitcoin-to-Ether exchanges will not be regulated). And only those wallet providers offering custodial services “of credentials necessary to access virtual currencies” are to be included in the legislation.
So there is no "harder" regulation planned, like some have speculated in the last months (e.g. about prohibiting anonymous cryptocurrencies like Monero). So the planned regulation is mostly of the same kind than what already is law in most of the member states.