Europe squares up to Big Tech, risking ire of Washington

MADRID 鈥 European nations are ratcheting up the pressure on social media companies, responding to a public outcry over child safety fears but risking a backlash from the United States, home to the likes of Facebook and Elon Musk鈥檚 X.
Spain on Tuesday ordered prosecutors to investigate Facebook owner Meta, X and TikTok for allegedly spreading AI-generated child sexual images, after a similar move in Britain.
Ireland also opened a formal probe of X鈥檚 AI chatbot Grok over its processing of personal data and the production of harmful sexualized images.
A growing list of European countries 鈥 France, Spain, Greece, Denmark, Slovenia and the Czech Republic 鈥 has in recent weeks moved to follow Australia in proposing a social media ban for adolescents, amid rising concern about addiction, online abuse and falling school performance.
Germany and Britain are weighing similar steps.
The national actions reflect political urgency but also frustration with the European Union (EU). Politicians, advisers and analysts say governments are acting alone because they doubt Brussels will move quickly or forcefully enough 鈥 even though individual states face the same legal, diplomatic and enforcement hurdles as the EU.
GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
Under the EU鈥檚 Digital Services Act (DSA), which took effect in 2024, major platforms face fines of up to 6% of global annual turnover if they fail to curb illegal or harmful content.
But enforcing penalties is politically fraught. US President Donald J. Trump has repeatedly threatened tariffs and sanctions if EU countries impose new tech taxes or enforce the DSA in ways that hit US firms.
The European Commission dismisses suggestions that it is soft on US Big Tech, pointing out in an online statement on Tuesday that it has opened several investigations including against X and its deployment of Grok.
鈥淭hrough measures like the DSA, the EU is shaping Europe鈥檚 digital future. It is supporting, funding and regulating new technologies with a goal to strengthen democracy,鈥 it said.
The rhetoric has at times boiled over.
French President Emmanuel Macron last year called US resistance to European regulation a 鈥済eopolitical battle.鈥
Mr. Trump鈥檚 administration warned in December that Europe faced 鈥渃ivilizational erasure鈥 and urged the US to foster 鈥渞esistance to Europe鈥檚 current trajectory.鈥
Spain鈥檚 Consumer Rights Minister Pablo Bustinduy told Le Grand Continent newspaper on Tuesday that his country鈥檚 crackdown aimed to 鈥渂reak free from digital dependence on the United States,鈥 adding that some platforms were being used to 鈥渄estabilize European democracies from within.鈥
INDEPENDENT ACTION
A modification of the DSA鈥檚 guidelines on July 14 allowing national age restriction laws prompted Denmark to move independently, its digitalization ministry told Reuters.
Spain had been weighing action for months, but the final trigger for proposing a ban for under-16s 鈥 and a law making social media CEOs accountable for hate speech 鈥 was Grok鈥檚 generation of non-consensual sexual images of minors, Youth and Children Minister Sira Rego said.
For Mr. Macron, who has blamed social media for fueling violence among young people, the turning point was the fatal stabbing of a school aide by a 14-year-old student in June. He said he would push for an EU-wide ban on adolescent use or, if necessary, act unilaterally in France.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said reading Jonathan Haidt鈥檚 鈥淭he Anxious Generation鈥 鈥 which argues that smartphones and social media are 鈥渞ewiring鈥 children鈥檚 brains 鈥 was 鈥渁n eye鈥憃pening experience.鈥
鈥淲e are running the biggest unchecked experiment with our children鈥檚 brains ever,鈥 he said. 鈥 Reuters


