EU Commission makes preliminary finding that Meta's Instagram and Facebook violate the Digital Services Act through addictive design
The European Commission on July 10 issued a preliminary finding that Meta has breached the EU's Digital Services Act through the addictive design of Instagram and Facebook, targeting features including infinite scroll and autoplay; Meta must respond before the Commission can issue a final decision and impose fines of up to 6% of global revenue
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Summary
The European Union's European Commission made a preliminary finding on July 10 that Meta has breached the Digital Services Act through the addictive design of Instagram and Facebook. The Commission's investigation, focused on infinite scroll, autoplay and notification systems, found that Meta failed to adequately assess and mitigate the mental-health risks those features create, particularly for minors. The finding is preliminary: Meta can submit observations before the Commission issues a final decision. A confirmed breach carries fines of up to 6% of Meta's global annual revenue. The DSA requires very large platforms to conduct systemic-risk assessments and mitigate any identified risks, including addiction-by-design.
The split
US coverage from CNBC and Forbes leads with the commercial stakes, framing the finding as another regulatory constraint on US tech companies operating in Europe. European outlets, including Euronews and NL Times, treat it as an accountability milestone on platform mental health. No statement from Meta was available in any feed document at publication time. The Commission's own press release is the authoritative primary record; the preliminary finding is not a final order.
By the numbers
- 6%, maximum fine as a share of global revenue for a confirmed DSA breach.
- 2, platforms in scope: Instagram and Facebook.
- Infinite scroll and autoplay, the specific design mechanics the Commission targeted.
Why it matters
The DSA was designed to force large platforms to audit systemic risks, including algorithmic harm. A confirmed Meta breach would establish addictive design as a legally actionable category under EU law, and could require Meta to redesign core engagement mechanics across its European user base. Regulators in other jurisdictions are watching; the EU has been the most aggressive enforcer of platform rules globally.
What to watch
- Meta's formal observations in response to the preliminary finding.
- Whether the Commission moves to a final decision, and the timeline for that process.
- Similar DSA investigations against other very large platforms.
- How Meta's required design changes, if any, compare with its existing opt-in "Take a Break" and "Quiet Mode" tools.