Global Markets
EU's Meta Crackdown: Algorithmic Addiction Risks Billions in Fines
724FinanceBora Yalın

The European Commission has formally accused Meta of breaching the Digital Services Act, citing the "addictive design" of Facebook and Instagram features as a systemic risk to mental wellbeing; unless the tech giant overhauls its engagement architecture, it faces potential fines reaching 6% of its total global annual turnover.
Brussels Targets the "Attention Economy" Engine
The Commission’s findings strike at the core of Meta’s business model by targeting mechanisms specifically engineered to maximize user retention. Regulators argue that features such as infinite scroll, autoplay, and aggressive push notifications shift users into an "autopilot mode," fostering compulsive usage patterns that the company failed to adequately mitigate.A Multi-Billion Dollar Liability Horizon
This regulatory action marks the second major finding against Meta by the EU this year, signaling an intensifying transatlantic crackdown on algorithmic accountability. The financial implications extend far beyond the immediate redesign costs, threatening significant capital allocation.From a capital flows perspective, this represents a critical inflection point for big tech valuation models. The "risk-on" trade that has historically supported growth stocks is now colliding with a "regulatory risk-off" environment. Investors must recalibrate their beta assumptions for Meta, as forcing a reduction in algorithmic addiction directly attacks the engine of ad-revenue growth. This is not merely a compliance cost; it is a structural threat to the efficiency of their user monetization funnel, potentially altering the risk premium demanded by global hedge funds holding major tech positions.