The European Union just dropped a €120 million ($140 million) fine on Elon Musk's X platform, marking the first enforcement action under the bloc's Digital Services Act. The DSA, adopted back in 2022, sets rules for how tech platforms moderate content, and apparently X didn't make the cut.
Musk Claims It's Personal
The Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO didn't hold back in his response, writing on X that "The 'EU' imposed this crazy fine not just on @X, but also on me personally, which is even more insane!"
He went further, suggesting it would be "appropriate to apply our response not just to the EU, but also to the individuals who took this action." That's a pretty clear signal that Musk isn't planning to quietly write a check and move on.
Trump Administration Fires Back
The fine has sparked a fierce response from President Donald Trump's inner circle, who are framing this as an assault on American tech and free speech.
Sen. Ted Cruz called the penalty "an attack on a great American job creator & it's an attack on the free speech of every American." His prescription? "Trump should impose SANCTIONS until this travesty is reversed."
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio echoed the sentiment, describing the fine as "an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments." He added that "The days of censoring Americans online are over."
Vice President JD Vance joined the chorus, stating, "The EU should be supporting free speech not attacking American companies over garbage." Vance had already warned European officials about "authoritarian censorship" during the Paris AI Summit back in February, so this isn't exactly new territory for him.
TikTok Dodges a Bullet
While X takes the heat, TikTok managed to sidestep penalties by submitting binding commitments on advertising transparency. The EU had flagged TikTok in May for failing to maintain accessible advertisement repositories as required under the DSA, but the company's commitments were apparently enough to avoid a fine.
The broader pattern here is clear: the EU is flexing its regulatory muscle against American tech giants. Both TikTok and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) have challenged the EU's supervisory fees in court, calling the calculations "absurd" and "discriminatory." The bloc is also planning an antitrust investigation into Meta over its WhatsApp AI assistant rollout.
This isn't the EU's first rodeo with Big Tech fines. The bloc previously hit Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) (GOOG) with a $3.5 billion penalty and imposed nearly $800 million in fines on Meta and Apple Inc. (AAPL).
The question now is whether the Trump administration will actually follow through with sanctions, or if this is just political theater. Either way, the tension between Silicon Valley and Brussels isn't cooling down anytime soon.