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EU Accuses Meta of Violating Tech Laws Over Addictive Social Media Features

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European Union: The European Union formally accused Meta Platforms of violating its landmark digital regulations by intentionally designing Facebook and Instagram to exploit psychological vulnerabilities and keep users compulsively engaged. In a fresh set of preliminary regulatory charges, European authorities demanded that the social media giant restructure its user interface and dismantle key engagement-focused mechanisms, including autoplaying videos and infinite scrolling.

The formal warnings stem from an expansive investigation launched by the European Commission under the Digital Services Act, a comprehensive legislative framework designed to force multinational tech conglomerates to protect consumer wellbeing online. European regulators noted that Meta failed to execute rigorous risk assessments regarding the negative impacts its user interface choices exert on the cognitive, physical, and mental health of its user base, particularly adolescents and young children. According to the preliminary findings, the company’s continuous loops of tailored, algorithmically driven recommendations and persistent push notifications function to keep user engagement on autopilot, driving compulsive habits.

While Meta provides various safety tools and parental oversight parameters, the commission noted that these features are ineffective because they are easily bypassed, overridden, or too technically cumbersome for typical guardians to configure constructively. In response, Brussels has proposed remedial design changes, suggesting that engagement-oriented recommendation systems be recalibrated to prioritize natural user pauses and that addictive elements like continuous scrolling be deactivated by default.

Meta defended its platform design, asserting that European regulators have failed to recognize the extensive protective measures the company has deployed to secure young users. The California-based firm highlighted its newly introduced Teen Accounts, which enforce automated profiles for minor users that cap daily interactions at 15 minutes, disable overnight usage, and grant parents a centralized console for oversight. Meta reaffirmed its commitment to establishing safe online environments for youth and expressed an intent to coordinate constructively with European regulators during the ongoing legal process.

The European Commission’s preliminary findings constitute the latest development in a broader regulatory crackdown against Meta, which faced separate European inquiries earlier for failing to stop children under 13 from establishing unauthorized accounts. Meta will now be permitted a formal window to present its legal defence before the European Union issues its conclusive verdict. If found guilty of a systemic violation of the Digital Services Act, the multinational tech firm faces maximum financial penalties of up to six per cent of its global annual revenue.

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