After fine against X, Elon Musk says EU ‘should be abolished’

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Elon Musk's X messaging platform was slapped with a fine of €120 million (S$181 million) on Dec 5 for breaking the EU’s digital rules.

Elon Musk's X messaging platform was slapped with a fine of €120 million (S$181 million) on Dec 5 for breaking the EU’s digital rules.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • X, owned by Elon Musk, received a €120 million fine from the EU for violating the Digital Services Act (DSA) regarding transparency.
  • Musk responded by stating the EU should be "abolished" and sovereignty returned to individual countries, criticising its bureaucracy.
  • The EU Commission cited deceptive "blue checkmark" design, lack of data access for researchers, and insufficient ad transparency as reasons.

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WASHINGTON - Elon Musk clapped back on Dec 6 at the European Union after it hit the tech tycoon’s X social media platform with a major fine, telling his 230 million online followers that the EU should be “abolished”.

Following a high-profile probe seen as a test of EU resolve to police Big Tech, the social media platform owned by the world’s richest person was

slapped with a fine of €120 million (S$181 million) on Dec 5

for breaking the bloc’s digital rules.

The penalty was swiftly criticised by the US administration of Mr Donald Trump, who as president aligned with Mr Musk on a contentious effort to slash the federal workforce and cut spending, before the two had a falling out.

Mr Musk himself weighed in after the fine was announced, posting on his X account: “The EU should be abolished and sovereignty returned to individual countries, so that governments can better represent their people.”

When a user reposted Mr Musk’s comment, he responded, “I mean it. Not kidding.”

“I love Europe, but not the bureaucratic monster that is the EU,” he added in another post.

The fine against X was the first imposed by the European Commission under its Digital Services Act (DSA) on content.

The Commission said X was guilty of breaching the DSA’s transparency obligation.

The violations include the deceptive design of the platform’s “blue checkmark” for supposedly verified accounts, and its failure to provide access to public data for researchers, it said.

X had also failed to be sufficiently transparent about its advertising, the Commission added. AFP

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