"Big Ad Blowback: X Boots EU Commission's Account Amid $140M Fine"
X has taken a firm stance against the European Commission just one day after being hit with a hefty fine of roughly $140 million. The commission's ad account on the platform has been terminated, with X accusing the EU body of exploiting a vulnerability in its Ad Composer tool to artificially inflate engagement.
According to Nikita Bier, head of product at X, the commission "logged into our dormant ad account" and used an exploit to trick users into viewing what was intended to be a video link. This, Bier claimed, was part of a deliberate attempt to boost reach on the platform. However, she also assured that the issue has been patched and exploited measures are now in place to prevent such abuse.
Despite this move, X has still chosen not to allow the commission to buy or track ads on its platform indefinitely. Instead, X requires specific measures and an action plan to address concerns raised by the EU body. Thomas Regnier, spokesperson for Tech Sovereignty at the European Commission, labeled X's system as "deceptive" and criticized the lack of transparency in advertising repositories, calling for better data sharing with researchers.
In response to the commission's allegations, Elon Musk, X's owner, shot back with a tweet labeling them "bullshit". The incident marks the first-ever fine under the Digital Services Act, which has sparked concerns about platform governance.
X has taken a firm stance against the European Commission just one day after being hit with a hefty fine of roughly $140 million. The commission's ad account on the platform has been terminated, with X accusing the EU body of exploiting a vulnerability in its Ad Composer tool to artificially inflate engagement.
According to Nikita Bier, head of product at X, the commission "logged into our dormant ad account" and used an exploit to trick users into viewing what was intended to be a video link. This, Bier claimed, was part of a deliberate attempt to boost reach on the platform. However, she also assured that the issue has been patched and exploited measures are now in place to prevent such abuse.
Despite this move, X has still chosen not to allow the commission to buy or track ads on its platform indefinitely. Instead, X requires specific measures and an action plan to address concerns raised by the EU body. Thomas Regnier, spokesperson for Tech Sovereignty at the European Commission, labeled X's system as "deceptive" and criticized the lack of transparency in advertising repositories, calling for better data sharing with researchers.
In response to the commission's allegations, Elon Musk, X's owner, shot back with a tweet labeling them "bullshit". The incident marks the first-ever fine under the Digital Services Act, which has sparked concerns about platform governance.