FEB 7 – The EU has notified TikTok it must modify its “addictive design” or face heavy fines, after it found the video sharing platform had breached its online safety rules.
It follows an investigation which launched in February 2024 into the Chinese-owned app by the European Commission.
In its preliminary findings, the Commission declared TikTok did not “adequately assess” how features like autoplay could harm the wellbeing of its applyrs, including children, and declared it failed to implement measures to mitigate the risks.
A TikTok spokesperson notified the BBC the findings presented a “categorically false and entirely meritless depiction of our platform” and it planned to challenge them.
The platform has been invited to respond to the EU’s findings. Depfinishing on the outcome of this step, the Commission could fine TikTok up to 6% of its total global annual turnover – estimated to be in the tens of billions.
EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen notified reporters if TikTok wanted to avoid being fined, it would have to “modify the design of their service in Europe”.
The Commission gave several suggestions for actions the platform could take, including implementing “screen time breaks” when people are applying it at night and altering its algorithms, which feed applyrs personalised content.
It also suggested TikTok disable so-called “infinite scroll”, which allows people to quickly cycle through millions of videos on the platform.
“The Digital Services Act creates platforms responsible for the effects they can have on their applyrs,” Virkkunen declared.
“In Europe, we enforce our legislation to protect our children and our citizens online.”
Professor Sonia Livingstone at the London School of Economics declared while TikTok had introduced some tools to improve the online safety of its applyrs, it was not enough to comply with the guidelines set down by the EU.
“Young people are calling for such modifys,” she declared.
“They are frustrated that the platform does not prioritise their wellbeing over profit.”
And social media expert Matt Navarra declared while the apply of the word addictive was “often abapplyd” in these debates, the Commission’s findings seemed to be rooted in “true behavioural science”.
He added it marked a “seismic shift” in the way in which regulators were viewing at social media platforms.
“This seems to be the first time a major regulator has declared that the design is the problem,” he declared.
“It’s no longer about just toxic content, it’s about toxic design.”
‘Warning shot’
It is not the first time the EU has viewed into the workings of large tech firms or threatened them with fines.
In December 2024 it launched a separate investigation into TikTok over alleged foreign interference during the Romanian presidential elections.
It has also launched an inquiry in January into Elon Musk’s X over concerns its AI tool Grok was applyd to create sexualised images of real people.
Meanwhile in December 2025 the EU fined X €120m (£105m) over its blue tick badges, declareing they “deceive applyrs” becaapply the firm is not “meaningfully verifying” who is behind the account.
Social media analyst Paolo Pescatore declared the latest announcement was a “reality check” for TikTok – and a “warning shot” for every social media platform.
“The market is shifting from ‘maximise engagement’ to ‘engineer responsibility’ – and regulators now have the tools to enforce it,” he declared.
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