Elon Musk isn't taking the European Union's latest penalty lightly. On Friday, the European Commission hit his social media platform X with a $140 million fine, and Musk responded by suggesting he might target the individual officials responsible.
The EU's Beef With X
The Commission accused X of breaking transparency rules under the Digital Services Act. Their main complaints? The blue checkmark feature, which used to signal verification but became a paid subscription perk, now misleads users according to regulators. They also took issue with X's advertising library, calling it opaque and inaccessible to researchers who need public data access.
Musk Takes It Personally
Musk didn't just see this as a corporate fine. He claimed the penalty targeted him personally and warned of consequences for the officials behind it. "It would seem appropriate to apply our response not just to the EU, but also to the individuals who took this action against me," he wrote on X. He didn't specify what form this response might take.
Washington Pushes Back
The fine sparked immediate backlash from U.S. officials, who framed the EU's action as an attack on free speech and accused European regulators of unfairly targeting American companies. The timing couldn't be worse for transatlantic relations. The Trump administration has already threatened additional tariffs against the EU if it continues penalizing U.S. tech giants.
This latest clash could accelerate the growing tech war between America and Europe, with implications for how tech platforms operate globally and what regulations they face on both sides of the Atlantic.