Brussels squeezes Big Tech: heavy fines and more digital sovereignty
The EU has again fined Apple, Meta and X, and is preparing rules to depend less on the tech giants. What's at stake.
Europe is tightening its grip on the tech giants. Under its digital markets and services laws, Brussels has handed down fines totalling hundreds of millions of euros, with penalties aimed at Apple, Meta and the platform X. The message is blunt: operate in the European market and you play by European rules.
More than fines
Behind the penalties sits a bigger strategy, so-called digital sovereignty. In early June the Commission put forward a proposal to reshape how European public institutions buy cloud and artificial-intelligence services, reducing reliance on suppliers from outside the bloc. The idea is that sensitive data and critical infrastructure should not all sit in the hands of a handful of American companies.
Why it matters for Portugal
Portugal follows the European rules, so these decisions land here exactly as they are. For consumers, they can mean more choice and fewer lock-ins, such as being able to switch app or store without penalties. For businesses and public administration, the door opens to European alternatives in digital services. For the giants, it is another sign that the European market, with hundreds of millions of users, does not govern itself.
The regulation is demanding and not free of criticism, with supporters speaking of fair competition and opponents warning of the risk of slowing innovation.
See also: Apple letting you choose your AI on iPhone and Portugal back on the UN Security Council.
More official information from the European Commission.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons