EU hits X with €120 million fine for violating digital transparency rules
Brussels says X misled users with blue checkmarks and failed to follow EU transparency rules
PTI
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Elon Musk bought X in 2022, after which badges were sold to anyone willing to pay USD 8 a month (Screengrab X/@elonmusk)
London, 5 Dec
European Union regulators on Friday fined Elon Musk’s social media platform
X 120 million euros (USD 140 million) for breaches of the bloc’s digital
regulations that they said could leave users exposed to scams and manipulation.
The European Commission issued its decision
following an investigation it opened two years ago into X under the 27-nation
bloc’s Digital Services Act, also known as the DSA.
It is the first time that the EU has issued a
non-compliance decision since rolling out the DSA. The sweeping rulebook
requires platforms to take more responsibility for protecting European users
and cleaning up harmful or illegal content and products on their sites, under
threat of hefty fines.
The Commission said it was punishing X,
previously known as Twitter, because of three different breaches of the DSA’s
transparency requirements. The decision could rile President Donald Trump,whose administration has lashed out at digital regulations, complaining that
Brussels was targeting US tech companies and vowing to retaliate.
The company did not respond immediately to an
email request for comment.
EU regulators had already outlined their
accusations in mid-2024 when they released preliminary findings of theirinvestigation into X.
Regulators said X’s blue checkmarks broke the
rules because of “deceptive design practices” and could expose users to scams
and manipulation.
Before Musk acquired X, the checkmarks
mirrored verification badges common on social media and were largely reserved
for celebrities, politicians and other influential accounts.
After he bought it in 2022, the site started
issuing the badges to anyone who wanted to pay USD 8 per month for one.
This means X does not meaningfully verify who
is behind an account, “making it difficult for users to judge the authenticity
of accounts and content they engage with,” the Commission said in its
announcement.
X also fell short of the transparency
requirements for its ad database, regulators said.
Platforms in the EU are required to provide a
database of all the digital advertisements they have carried, with details such
as who paid for them and the intended audience, to help researchers detect
scams, fake ads and coordinated influence campaigns.
But X’s database, the Commission said, is
undermined by design features and access barriers such as “excessive delays in
processing.”
Regulators also said X puts up “unnecessary
barriers” for researchers trying to access public data, which stymies research
into systemic risks that European users face.
“Deceiving users with blue checkmarks,
obscuring information on ads and shutting out researchers have no place online
in the EU. The DSA protects users,” Henna Virkkunen, the EU’s executive
vice-president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy, said in a prepared
statement.
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