EU Commission building with X logo fined €120M for transparency violations under DSA, showing blue checkmarks, ads, data locks, Elon Musk silhouette, and Europe download surge.
AIによって生成された画像

European Union fines X about $140 million over transparency violations

AIによって生成された画像
事実確認済み

The European Commission has imposed a fine of €120 million (about $140 million) on X for breaching transparency rules under the Digital Services Act, citing deceptive use of blue checkmarks, ad transparency failures and limits on researcher access to data. Elon Musk, who bought the platform in 2022, has framed the move as an attack on free speech while pointing to a surge in downloads across Europe.

The European Commission announced on Friday that it fined X €120 million — roughly $140 million — for non‑compliance with transparency obligations under the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA).

According to the Commission’s decision and accompanying press materials, the penalty is the first non‑compliance fine issued under the DSA and targets three main areas: the deceptive design of X’s blue checkmark system, a lack of transparency in the platform’s advertising repository, and X’s failure to provide required access to public data for researchers. The Commission said that allowing users to pay for a “verified” blue checkmark without meaningful identity checks misleads the public about account authenticity and exposes users to scams and impersonation, and that X’s ad repository lacks key information and erects barriers that prevent effective scrutiny by researchers and civil society.

Elon Musk, who purchased what was then Twitter in 2022 and later rebranded it as X, has used the platform to attack the ruling and argue that Brussels is targeting a platform he presents as committed to free speech. As highlighted by the Daily Wire, Musk promoted third‑party rankings showing X had become the most downloaded app across Europe after the EU announced its action. On Sunday he posted that “X is seeing record‑breaking downloads in many countries in Europe” and added, “Now number 1 in every EU country!” He also wrote, “The European Union is not DEMOcracy–rule of the people–but rather BUREAUcracy–rule of the unelected bureaucrat!”

X executives have also criticized how the European Commission publicized its decision. In a response reported by the Daily Wire and echoed in technology outlets, X’s head of product, Nikita Bier, accused the Commission of exploiting a quirk in the platform’s advertising tools to boost the reach of its announcement. “The irony of your announcement: You logged into your dormant ad account to take advantage of an exploit in our Ad Composer — to post a link that deceives users into thinking it’s a video and to artificially increase its reach,” Bier wrote in a post on X. He added that X believes “everyone should have an equal voice” on the platform and said the Commission’s ad account had been terminated. Musk later reposted Bier’s statement. X has since cut off the Commission’s access to its ad account, a move described as largely symbolic by some analysts because the account had reportedly seen little use in recent years.

The EU’s action has prompted a sharp response from senior figures in the Trump administration in Washington, underscoring broader transatlantic tensions over regulation of U.S. technology firms. As reported by the Daily Wire and other outlets, Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the Commission’s decision “an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments,” adding that “the days of censoring Americans online are over.” Vice President JD Vance, speaking shortly before the fine was publicly announced, argued that the EU should “support free speech not attack American companies over garbage.”

European officials, for their part, insist the case is about enforcing EU law rather than policing political speech. In its press release, the Commission said the DSA is intended to protect users’ rights and ensure transparency around how major platforms operate, including how accounts are presented as verified, how ads are labeled and archived, and how researchers can study systemic online risks.

The dispute over X highlights a growing clash between U.S. political leaders skeptical of European regulation and EU policymakers determined to assert their authority over large digital platforms that operate across the bloc. X has 60 to 90 days, depending on the specific obligations, to detail how it will address the violations or face the possibility of additional penalties under the DSA.

人々が言っていること

Discussions on X portray the EU's €120 million fine on X under the DSA primarily as bureaucratic overreach and an assault on free speech, with Elon Musk demanding the EU's abolition and supporters celebrating X's surge to the top news app in every EU country. Critics defend the penalty as justified enforcement for deceptive blue checkmarks, ad opacity, and researcher data blocks, without curbing content. Skeptics highlight hypocrisy and censorship-by-proxy risks.

関連記事

Illustration depicting EU officials presenting the Digital Services Act report in a conference room, contrasted with worried U.S. officials and free-speech advocates protesting in the background.
AIによって生成された画像

EU、初回レビューでデジタルサービス法を擁護 表現の自由批判者と米当局が警鐘を鳴らす

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像 事実確認済み

欧州委員会のデジタルサービス法に関する初報告書は月曜日に公表され、同法を「コンテンツ非依存的」とし基本的人権に沿ったものと記述しているが、市民社会団体と米当局はこれが言論を抑制し米国テック企業に負担をかける可能性があると警告している。

米国は、米国企業を標的としたEUの技術規制への報復として、欧州連合の主要サービス提供事業者に対する制限を警告した。このエスカレーションは、EUのデジタルサービス法の下でイーロン・マスクのXに課せられた1億4000万ドルの罰金に続き、トランプ政権から強い非難を浴びたものである。欧州当局者は、自らのルールがすべての企業に公平な競争環境を保証すると主張している。

AIによるレポート

欧州連合(EU)は、Elon Musk氏のxAIに対し、そのチャットボットGrokが非合意の性的画像を生成した疑い、および潜在的な児童性的虐待素材を含むとして、正式な調査を開始した。規制当局は、同社がXプラットフォーム上のリスク軽減においてデジタルサービス法(DSA)に準拠したかを検証中だ。違反が確認されれば、xAIのグローバル年間売上高の6%に達する罰金が科される可能性がある。

British Imran Ahmed, head of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, has filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over sanctions threatening his expulsion from the United States. These measures target five Europeans accused of censorship harming US interests in tech regulation. The European Union condemns the sanctions as unjustified and is considering retaliation.

AIによるレポート

The United States has imposed entry bans on the leaders of the German organization HateAid, which combats online hate. The reason is alleged censorship of American online platforms. Also affected are a former EU commissioner and British NGO representatives.

Social media platform X is building a new feature called Smart Cashtags to link ticker symbols in posts to specific assets and real-time prices. The tool aims to reduce confusion in crypto discussions amid tensions with Crypto Twitter. A release is targeted for February 2026.

AIによるレポート

旧TwitterのソーシャルメディアプラットフォームXは、2026年1月16日午前7時頃(PT)から断続的な障害が発生し、世界中のユーザーとAIチャットボットGrokに影響を及ぼしました。Downdetectorでの報告が急増し、数時間にわたり問題が続き、午後早々に完全解決しました。

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否