
“We acknowledge the European Commission’s statement,” said Meta. “Personalized ads are vital for Europe’s economy.”
The investigation took place under the EU’s landmark Digital Markets Act, which is designed to tackle the ability of Big Tech giants and is among the many bloc’s tech regulations which have drawn fierce pushback from the Trump administration.
The announcement comes only days after Brussels launched an antitrust investigation into Meta over its latest policy on artificial intelligence providers’ access to WhatsApp—a case that underscores the commission’s readiness to make use of its powers to challenge Big Tech.
That upcoming European probe follows the launch of recent DMA investigations into Google’s parent company Alphabet over its rating of reports outlets in search results and Amazon and Microsoft over their cloud computing services.
Last week, the commission also fined Elon Musk’s X 120 million euros for breaking the bloc’s digital transparency rules. The X sanction led to heavy criticism from a big selection of US government officials, including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio who said the high-quality is “an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments.”
Andrew Puzder, the US ambassador to the EU, said the high-quality “is the results of EU regulatory over-reach” and said the Trump administration opposes “censorship and can challenge burdensome regulations that concentrate on US firms abroad.”
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