The European Union fines Apple 500 million euros and Meta 200 million in
separate digital cases
[April 23, 2025] By
KELVIN CHAN
LONDON (AP) — European Union watchdogs fined Apple and Meta hundreds of
millions of euros Wednesday as they stepped up enforcement of the
27-nation bloc’s digital competition rules.
The European Commission imposed a 500 million euro ($571 million) fine
on Apple for preventing app makers from pointing users to cheaper
options outside its App Store.
The commission, which is the EU’s executive arm, also fined Meta
Platforms 200 million euros because it forced Facebook and Instagram
users to choose between seeing ads or paying to avoid them.
The punishments were smaller than the blockbuster multibillion-euro
fines that the commission has previously slapped on Big Tech companies
in antitrustcases.
Apple and Meta have to comply with the decisions within 60 days or risk
unspecified “periodic penalty payments,” the commission said.
The decisions were expected to come in March, but officials apparently
held off amid an escalating trans-Atlantic trade war with U.S. President
Donald Trump, who has repeatedly complained about regulations from
Brussels affecting American companies.

The penalties were issued under the EU’s Digital Markets Act, also known
as the DMA. It’s a sweeping rulebook that amounts to a set of do’s and
don’ts designed to give consumers and businesses more choice and prevent
Big Tech “gatekeepers” from cornering digital markets.
The DMA seeks to ensure “that citizens have full control over when and
how their data is used online, and businesses can freely communicate
with their own customers,” Henna Virkkunen, the commission’s executive
vice-president for tech sovereignty, said in a statement.
“The decisions adopted today find that both Apple and Meta have taken
away this free choice from their users and are required to change their
behavior,” Virkkunen said.
Both companies indicated they would appeal.
Apple accused the commission of “unfairly targeting” the iPhone maker,
and said it "continues to move the goal posts” despite the company's
efforts to comply with the rules.
Meta Chief Global Affairs Officer Joel Kaplan said in a statement that
the “Commission is attempting to handicap successful American businesses
while allowing Chinese and European companies to operate under different
standards.”
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In the App Store case, the Commission had accused the iPhone maker of
imposing unfair rules preventing app developers from freely steering
consumers to other channels.
Among the DMA’s provisions are requirements to let developers inform
customers of cheaper purchasing options and direct them to those offers.
The commission said it ordered Apple to remove technical and commercial
restrictions that prevent developers from steering users to other
channels, and to end “non-compliant” conduct.
Apple said it has “spent hundreds of thousands of engineering hours and
made dozens of changes to comply with this law, none of which our users
have asked for."
“Despite countless meetings, the Commission continues to move the goal
posts every step of the way," the company said.
The EU’s Meta investigation centered on the company’s strategy to comply
with strict European data privacy rules by giving users the option of
paying for ad-free versions of Facebook and Instagram.
Users could pay at least 10 euros ($11) a month to avoid being targeted
by ads based on their personal data. The U.S. tech giant rolled out the
option after the European Union’s top court ruled Meta must first get
consent before showing ads to users, in a decision that threatened its
business model of tailoring ads based on individual users’ online
interests and digital activity.
Regulators took issue with Meta’s model, saying it doesn’t allow users
to exercise their right to “freely consent” to allowing their personal
data from its various services, which also including Facebook
Marketplace, WhatsApp, and Messenger, to be combined for personalized
ads.
Meta rolled out a third option in November giving Facebook and Instagram
users in Europe the option to see fewer personalized ads if they don’t
want to pay for an ad-free subscription. The commission said it's
“currently assessing” this option and continues to hold talks with Meta,
and has asked the company to provide evidence of the new option's
impact.
“This isn’t just about a fine; the Commission forcing us to change our
business model effectively imposes a multi-billion-dollar tariff on Meta
while requiring us to offer an inferior service," Kaplan said. "And by
unfairly restricting personalized advertising the European Commission is
also hurting European businesses and economies.”
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