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The European Commission has fined Apple and Meta 500 million euros ($568 million) and 200 million euros ($227 million), ...
On April 22, 2025, the European Commission announced its first non-compliance decisions under the Digital Markets Act (“DMA”) ...
Exchange of views between Commission competition chief Teresa Ribera and EU Parliament's internal markets committee on the ...
Meta's past Facebook settings breached GDPR's privacy-by-default rules, leading to a damages award by a German court, ...
Congress returns next week and Republicans will pick-up their efforts to pass a reconciliation bill to extend the 2017 Tax ...
Apple was found in violation of anti-steering regulations while Meta was charged with failing to provide options that limit ...
The EU has concerns about Apple’s restrictions impacting App Store developers and Meta’s “pay or consent” advertising model.
The $570 million fine against Apple in the European Union has triggered a sharp rebuke from President Trump's White House.
As detailed by our sister site, Eurogamer, Apple was found to have violated EU law by not permitting App Store apps to link or even make reference to alternative means of payment that could circumvent ...
Enforcement of the Digital Markets Act is under way. The European Commission has launched formal proceedings against three major providers of core platform services.
The US criticized the EU fines on Apple and Meta, calling them “economic extortion." It also attacked the DMA legislation.
The European Commission has found Apple and Meta in breach of its Digital Markets Act, and has fined them €500m and €200m respectively.
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