bbieron@platformeconomyinsights.com

Meta to End Political and Social Issue Ads in Europe

Aug 1, 2025

Report from the New York Times

In Brief – Meta will stop allowing political, electoral or social issue ads on its digital platforms in Europe starting in October due to the requirements of the EU’s Transparency and Targeting of Political Advertising (TTPA) regulation. The goal of the TTPA is to “support open and fair political debate” by attempting to cut down on manipulation of information, foreign election interference and the misuse of users’ personal data, according to EU regulators. The new regulations limit the targeting of ads with content that is political or involves social issues by requiring that users give “explicit and separate consent” for the use of their data in relation to the political ad in question, while various kinds of personal information, including racial or ethnic data, cannot be used at all in targeting. In announcing their decision to end the entire category of ads, the company said the TTPA would create “an untenable level of complexity and legal uncertainty for advertisers and platforms operating in the EU,” and was “another threat to the principles of personalized advertising” that will “lead to people seeing less relevant ads” on its apps. The company added that users, including politicians and political parties, will still be able to post and engage in political debate on its platforms, and that Google announced a similar ads decision last November.

Context – Conservative activists have argued for years that they are not treated fairly on social media platforms. Nobody has been more vocal than President Trump. And as conservative activists increasingly network across borders, such charges are spreading globally. The EU’s Digital Services Act investigation of X raises those issues directly. Even after the breakup with Elon Musk, the issue of free speech that roils the European establishment resonates in the Trump Administration. Meta has seemed intent on joining the fray, possibly to build goodwill so that President Trump will fight for the company against the European Commission’s use of the Digital Markets Act to require Meta, and at this point only Meta, to offer users a free version of their platforms that includes ads, but only ineffective non-targeted ads that aren’t valuable to advertisers, consumers, or the platform.

View By Monthly
Latest Blog
OpenAI Reaches Defense Department Deal Flanking Anthropic

Report from the New York Times In Brief – OpenAI says it has reached agreement with the US Department of Defense (DoD) to supply AI for classified systems in a manner that the company says addresses its opposition to the technology being misused in autonomous weapons...

Federal Judge Blocks Virginia’s One-Hour Time Limit for Social Media

Report from Reuters In Brief – US District Judge Patricia Tolliver Giles has issued a preliminary injunction blocking Virginia from enforcing Senate Bill 854 that imposes a time limit on teens using social media platforms with so-called “addictive” features. Platforms...

FTC Chairman Accuses Apple of News Media Viewpoint Discrimination

Report from the New York Times In Brief – The Federal Trade Commission announced that it sent a warning letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook expressing concerns that the operations of the Apple News may favor certain political viewpoints in a way that conflicts with Apple’s...

PM Starmer Proposes Bringing AI Chatbots Under the UK Online Safety Act

Report from Bloomberg In Brief – UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has announced plans to bring AI chatbots directly under the Online Safety Act (OSA) to close what he called a “legal loophole” in Britain’s online safety regime and ensure that they are designed to not...

Reddit Fined By UK ICO for Failing to Age Check 13-Year-Olds

Report from the BBC In Brief – The UK’s data protection regulator, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), has fined Reddit more than £14 million for failing to adequately enforce its rules regarding children under 13 accessing the platform. Following an...

Platform Economy Insights produces a short email four times a week that reviews two top stories with concise analysis. It is the best way to keep on top of the news you should know. Sign up for this free email here.

* indicates required