European Commission Launches Investigation into Meta for Suspected DSA Violations
April 30, 2024
The European Commission investigates Meta, parent company of Facebook and Instagram, for potential Digital Services Act violations related to deceptive advertising and political content, as well as concerns over civic discourse tools.
Brussels – The European Commission said on Tuesday that it has opened an investigation into Meta, the parent of Facebook and Instagram, for suspected violations of the Digital Services Act over deceptive advertising and political content on its services.
The commission said in a statement it was also concerned about the non-availability of effective third-party real-time civic discourse and election monitoring tools to the European Parliament before elections.
The commission pointed out that Meta has not replaced the public insight tool CrowdTangle as well.
“This commission has created means to protect European citizens from targeted disinformation and manipulation by third countries,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement. “If we suspect a violation of the rules, we act.
“This is true at all times, but especially in times of democratic elections. Big digital platforms must live up to their obligations to put enough resources into this and today’s decision shows that we are serious about compliance.”
The commission said it will probe whether Meta’s mechanism for flagging illegal content on its services as well as the user redress and internal compliant mechanisms are working effectively enough to comply with DSA rules. (UPI)