
Meta and TikTok take EU to court over ‘unfair' Digital Services Act levy
Listen to article
Meta Platforms and TikTok said a European Union supervisory fee levied on them was disproportionate and based on a flawed methodology, as they took their fight with tech regulators to Europe's second-highest court on Wednesday.
Under the Digital Services Act that became law in 2022, the two companies and 16 others are subject to a supervisory fee amounting to 0.05% of their annual worldwide net income aimed at covering the European Commission's cost of monitoring their compliance with the law.
The size of the annual fee is based on the number of average monthly active users for each company and whether the company posts a profit or loss in the preceding financial year.
Meta told judges at the General Court it was not trying to avoid paying its fair share of the fee, but it questioned how the Commission had calculated the levy, saying it had been based on the revenue of the group rather than of the subsidiary.
Meta's lawyer Assimakis Komninos told the panel of five judges the company still did not know how the fee was calculated.
He said the provisions in the Digital Services Act, or DSA, "go against the letter and the spirit of the law, are totally untransparent with black boxes and have led to completely implausible and absurd results".
ByteDance-owned Chinese online social media platform TikTok was equally critical.
"What has happened here is anything but fair or proportionate. The fee has used inaccurate figures and discriminatory methods," TikTok lawyer Bill Batchelor told the court.
"It inflates TikTok's fees, requires it to pay, not just for itself, but for other platforms and disregards the excessive fee cap," he said.
He accused the Commission of double-counting the companies' users, saying this was discriminatory because users switching between their mobile phones and laptops would then be counted twice.
He also said regulators had exceeded their legal power by setting the fee cap at the level of group profits.
Commission lawyer Lorna Armati rejected both companies' arguments and defended the Commission's use of group profit as a reference value to calculate the supervisory fee.
"When a group has consolidated accounts, it is the financial resources of the group as a whole that are available to that provider in order to bear the burden of the fee," she told the court.
"The providers had sufficient information to understand why and how the Commission used the numbers that it did and there is no question of any breach of their right to be heard now, unequal treatment," she said.
The Court is expected to issue its ruling next year.
The cases are T-55/24 Meta Platforms Ireland v Commission and T-58/24 TikTok Technology v Commission.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
an hour ago
- Business Recorder
Meta finalizes $14.3 billion investment in Scale AI, sources say, poaching CEO Wang
Facebook-owner Meta has finalized the $14.3 billion purchase of a 49% stake in data-labeling startup Scale AI, according to two sources familiar with the matter. Scale said late on Thursday that the deal values it at $29 billion and its CEO Alexandr Wang will join Meta to play a prominent role in the Facebook owner's AI strategy. Scale's chief strategy officer, Jason Droege, will serve as its interim CEO, Scale AI said. The company did not respond to a request for additional information on the financial details of the transaction. The deal would rank as Meta's second-largest ever after its $19 billion buyout of WhatsApp. Meta in talks for Scale AI investment that could top $10 billion, Bloomberg News reports The sources declined to be identified because the information was not public. By poaching Wang, who does not come from a research background but was able to build one of the largest businesses in fueling useful data essential for model training for AI labs, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is betting that Meta's AI efforts can be turned around by an adept business leader more in the mold of OpenAI's Sam Altman than the research scientists at the helm of most competing labs. Since many of those labs have contracted Scale for data services, Zuckerberg could also obtain an inside track into his rivals' priorities around data, one of the key ingredients for developing today's AI models. Scale was valued at nearly $14 billion in a May 2024 funding round where the company raised $1 billion from backers including tech giants Nvidia, Amazon and Meta. Founded in 2016, Scale AI provides vast amounts of accurately labeled data, which is pivotal for training sophisticated tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT. To do so, Scale set up subsidiary platforms such as Remotasks and Outlier to recruit and manage gig workers who manually label the data. Wang, the 28-year-old co-founder, has steered the company to provide data labeling services across the buzzy tech sectors of the moment, from autonomous vehicles several years ago to generative AI today.


Business Recorder
2 hours ago
- Business Recorder
China's yuan slips as Middle East tensions rise
SHANGHAI: China's yuan eased against the US dollar on Friday, retreating from a more than two-week high reached overnight, as the greenback rebounded after Israel launched strikes on Iran. Escalating tensions in the Middle East dented global risk appetite, prompting investors to flock to safe-haven assets such as gold and the US dollar. The spot yuan opened at 7.1799 per dollar and was last trading at 7.1767 as of 0253 GMT, 52 pips lower than the previous late session close. Still, traders and analysts said broad weakness in the dollar continues to lend support to the yuan. Yuan slips as investors wait on outcome of US-China trade talks Prior to the market opening, the People's Bank of China set the midpoint rate at 7.1772 per dollar, its strongest since March 28 and 87 pips weaker than a Reuters' estimate. The spot yuan is allowed to trade 2% on either side of the fixed midpoint each day. The official midpoint has been set in line with market estimates possibly due to the fact that the US dollar has been trading sideways and there is less need for policy guidance at this point, Maybank analysts said in a note. The onshore yuan firmed in the late night session on Thursday, hitting its strongest since May 26, as the dollar index fell to its lowest in over three years on weaker-than-expected US inflation data. 'On a trade-weighted basis, the yuan has been underperforming, allowing Chinese exports to maintain relative price competitiveness,' they said, adding that the current level marks a sweet spot for trade negotiations with the US China's trade-weighted CFETS yuan basket index fell to 95.49, the lowest since July 2023, according to Reuters estimates. The offshore yuan has firmed towards 7.17 amid broader US dollar weakness and an improved outlook after the US and China reached agreement on a trade framework, said Chang Wei Liang, currency and credit strategist at DBS. A private property developer launched a US dollar bond sale for the first time since 2023, a sign that stress in China's real estate financing sector may be easing, he said. An index that measures the dollar against six other currencies rose 0.45% and was last at 98.12. The offshore yuan traded at 7.1794 yuan per dollar, down about 0.09% in Asian trade.


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Iron ore set for weekly loss as Trump's fresh tariffs on steel weigh
BEIJING: Iron ore futures extended decline for a second consecutive session on Friday, set for a weekly loss, as US President Donald Trump's plan to impose a 50% tariff to an additional range of 'steel derivative products' weighed on sentiment. The most-traded September iron ore contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) was down 0.5% at 700.5 yuan ($97.63) a metric ton, as of 0212 GMT. The contract has lost 1.1% so far this week. The benchmark July iron ore on the Singapore Exchange lost 0.68% to $93.9 a ton, as of 0205 GMT, a decline of 1.7% so far this week. The contract, which has been below the key psychological level of $100 for nearly a month, hit its lowest level since April 10 at $93.65 earlier in the session. A range of imported household appliances including dishwashers, washing machines, refrigerators and more will be subject to Trump's 50% steel tariffs from June 23. Iron ore slides on heightened Sino-US trade tension, China stimulus uncertainty It's largely a sentiment-driven reaction for now and isn't likely to have a significant impact on China's steel market in the near term, as any effects will take time to filter through the steel industry, said two Chinese analysts on condition of anonymity as they are not authorised to speak to media. Demand for the key steelmaking ingredient remained firm, helping to limit losses. Average daily hot metal output, a gauge of iron ore demand, hovered 2.42 million tons for a third consecutive week, data from consultancy Mysteel showed. Other steelmaking ingredients on the DCE, however, advanced, with coking coal and coke up 0.9% and 0.3%, respectively. Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange weakened. Rebar lost 0.81%, hot-rolled coil slid 0.91%, wire rod shed 0.94% and stainless steel edged down 0.28%.