
The Commission’s preliminary finding against Facebook and Instagram intensifies Europe’s effort to regulate platform architecture, not just online content
The European Commission has advanced one of its most politically sensitive Digital Services Act investigations, initially finding that Meta violated EU regulations through the addictive design of Instagram and Facebook. While not a final decision, this indicates a broader institutional shift: Brussels is increasingly holding platform design, recommendation systems, and user-retention tools accountable.
On 10 July, the Commission stated that its investigation targets features such as infinite scroll, autoplay, push notifications, and personalized recommender systems. As per the EU executive’s preliminary finding against Meta, the company failed to properly assess or mitigate risks to users’ physical and mental wellbeing, including minors and vulnerable adults.
For EU policymakers, this issue extends beyond one company. It questions whether the design logic of major social networks can align with a regulatory framework focused on fundamental rights, transparency, and risk reduction. The Commission argues that very large online platforms cannot just moderate content while ignoring engagement-driven systems.
A Case About Systems
The Digital Services Act grants the Commission direct oversight over the largest online platforms and search engines in the EU. It requires these entities to identify systemic risks, evaluate how their services may affect public health, minors, civic discourse, and fundamental rights, and take steps to minimize those risks.
This institutional framework is significant. The DSA does not prohibit social media, nor does it make Brussels the editor of online speech. Instead, it imposes responsibilities on platforms whose size and design can shape the daily environment where millions of Europeans communicate, learn, work, and form opinions.
The Commission’s case against Meta thus shifts focus from content moderation to product design. The core question is not only about the presence of harmful content on a platform but whether the platform’s structure fosters prolonged usage, repeated exposure, and compulsive habits that younger users may struggle to handle.
The European Times previously reported that the EU Meta probe was shifting toward addictive design, especially concerning children’s safety. The new preliminary finding confirms that this concern has now become a formal enforcement issue.
Rights, Evidence and Due Process
Meta retains the right to review the Commission’s file and respond before any final decision is made. This is crucial. A preliminary finding is legally significant, but it does not equate to a confirmed violation with penalties.
Should the Commission uphold its view, Meta might face remedies and financial sanctions under the DSA. This law allows fines up to 6% of a company’s global annual revenue for confirmed breaches, though the real impact may lie in enforced design changes rather than financial penalties.
Meta has publicly claimed that it has implemented stronger protections for young users, including teen-specific account settings, parental controls, and time-management features. Regulators, however, are examining whether these measures are effective when the underlying service continues to incentivize attention, recurrence, and personalization at scale.
The broader DSA framework stipulates that very large platforms must address risks, including minors’ protection, public health, and physical and mental wellbeing. The Commission’s explanation of the Digital Services Act emphasizes that citizens should have more control over online experiences, including non-personalized feed options and protection from deceptive design.
Europe’s Harder Platform Question
The case arises as European governments debate age verification, potential social media restrictions for minors, and stronger consumer-protection rules for













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