Regulators from the European Union are reportedly contemplating a $1 billion penalty against Elon Musk’s platform X, considering income from his additional enterprises, such as Tesla and SpaceX, as indicated by The New York Times.
Officials from the EU assert that X has breached the Digital Services Act and intend to apply a provision of the act to determine a fine based on revenue that incorporates other firms Musk manages, as per an April 3 article by the publication, which referenced four individuals familiar with the strategy.
According to the Digital Services Act, which was enacted in October 2022 to regulate social media firms and “mitigate illicit and detrimental operations online,” businesses can incur fines of up to 6% of worldwide revenue for infractions.
A representative for the European Commission, the legislative body of the bloc, refrained from commenting on this matter to The New York Times but stated that it would “persist in enforcing our regulations fairly and without bias toward any companies operating in the EU.”
In a statement, X’s Global Government Affairs team declared that if the information regarding the EU’s intentions is correct, it “marks an unparalleled act of political censorship and an assault on free expression.”
“X has exceeded expectations in complying with the EU’s Digital Services Act, and we will explore every avenue available to defend our enterprise, ensure our users’ safety, and safeguard freedom of speech throughout Europe,” asserted X’s global government affairs division.
Source: Global Government Affairs
In addition to the fine, EU regulators may potentially request alterations to products at X, with the complete range of penalties expected to be detailed in the following months.
Nevertheless, a resolution may be achievable if the social media entity consents to modifications that meet the regulators’ approval, according to the Times.
One of the officials who spoke with the Times also mentioned that X is undergoing a second inquiry claiming that the platform’s strategy for managing user-generated content has turned it into a center for unlawful hate speech and misinformation, which could lead to further penalties.
X EU investigation ongoing since 2023
The EU probe initiated in 2023. A preliminary judgment in July 2024 determined that X had breached the Digital Services Act by neglecting to deliver data to external researchers, failing to provide sufficient transparency regarding advertisers, or verifying the identities of users with verified accounts.
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X countered the ruling with numerous points of contention, and Musk asserted at that moment that he had been presented with a proposition
alleging that EU regulators informed him that if he covertly suppressed specific content, X would evade fines.
Thierry Breton, the previous EU commissioner for the internal market, stated in a July 12 X message in 2024 that there was no covert arrangement and that X’s team had requested the “Commission to elucidate the process for settlement and clarify our concerns,” and its reply was consistent with “established regulatory protocols.”
Musk responded he anticipated “a very public conflict in court so that the population of Europe can uncover the truth.”
Source: Thierry Breton
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