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EU targets TikTok, X, other apps over AI risk to elections

The European Union's new Digital Services Act gives the bloc wide authority to question — and potentially fine — companies over their safeguards.

BRUSSELS (AFP) — The EU on Thursday wielded a powerful new digital law to press TikTok and seven other platforms on the AI risks for upcoming elections in the 27-nation bloc, including from deepfakes.

In a flurry of actions taken under the Digital Services Act, the European Commission quizzed TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, X, Google, YouTube, Snapchat and Bing on what they were doing to counter those risks.

The commission also announced a formal probe against Chinese internet retailer AliExpress for multiple suspected breaches of the act, among them the sale of illegal medicines and dietary supplements, and not preventing minors from accessing pornography.

Additionally, Brussels asked Microsoft's professional social network LinkedIn about how users' personal information is being used for targeting advertising.

"DSA now running at full speed" after coming into force last year, the European Union's top digital enforcer, commissioner Thierry Breton, posted on social media apps Bluesky and X, formerly Twitter.

"Enforcement teams fully mobilized," he said.

On the information request to the eight platforms on steps to mitigate risks from generative AI, the commission said in a statement it was looking at issues "such as so-called 'hallucinations' where AI provides false information, the viral dissemination of deepfakes, as well as the automated manipulation of services that can mislead voters."

The formal requests made to those platforms, as well as the request to LinkedIn, do not presuppose further action being taken. That would depend on the information gleaned.

The probe against AliExpress, on the other hand, gives Brussels the power to dig deep into its internal documents and processes and to take testimony.

Such level of action against a company, depending on the outcome, potentially exposes it to fines running up to 6% of a platform's global turnover, or even a ban in egregious cases.

EU reins in Big Tech

European Commission officials said the focus on generative AI and how major platforms were handling it stemmed from concerns on how it might be used to influence voting in June EU elections.

"We want to equip ourselves and we want to equip the platforms and alert the platforms to really be best prepared for all sorts of incidents that might come our way with regard to the upcoming elections, in particular, of course, the EP election," one official told journalists, referring to the elections for the European Parliament in June.

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The announcement looking at the AI risk came a day after the European Parliament voted to adopt a major new law seeking to curb abuses of artificial intelligence. That legislation will take effect once formally signed off on by EU member countries.

Overall, Brussels' legal arsenal to impose order in the digital sphere has been massively beefed up in recent months with the act and a sister Digital Markets Act, and the AI Act, with the goal of better protecting European citizens and businesses while still fostering innovation.

The combined weight of those pieces of legislation are likely to serve as guideposts for other countries to follow, especially in the West.

The United States, which has an executive order on AI safety standards, is potentially headed towards an outright ban on TikTok if it stays under the ownership of Chinese company ByteDance.

U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday overwhelmingly backed a bill to ban TikTok unless ByteDance divested itself of the app within six months. The bill still needs to pass the upper house of the U.S. Congress.

The European Commission official said of Brussels' actions including TikTok that "there is no kind of ... China bashing" taking place at the EU level, and that all online platforms were being given "equal treatment" under the act.

They added that Thursday's announcements are "certainly not the last kind of action" and "there will be more to come because we're constantly working on the material that we get." 

By DANIEL ARONSSOHN Agence France-Presse

Categories / International, Technology

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