` Elon Musk's X Hit With Historic $140M EU Fine Over 'Deceptive Design' - Ruckus Factory

Elon Musk’s X Hit With Historic $140M EU Fine Over ‘Deceptive Design’

GuntherEagleman – X

On December 5, 2025, in Brussels, European regulators delivered a landmark verdict on Elon Musk’s social platform. The European Commission announced a €120 million ($140 million) penalty against X, formerly Twitter, accusing the company of turning its signature blue checkmark into a tool for deception and breaking key transparency rules under the European Union’s new Digital Services Act (DSA).

Once a badge of authenticity, the blue symbol had become, in the Commission’s view, a gateway for impersonation and fraud affecting hundreds of millions of users in the EU. The decision marked the first formal non-compliance ruling under the DSA, setting a precedent for how large online platforms will be policed across the bloc.

The Checkmark Reversed

Blue Verified Badge for ensuring a brand or company is reall and authentic one
Photo by Iamovichowdhury on Wikimedia

Before Musk’s takeover, Twitter’s blue check was reserved for celebrities, officials, journalists, and other notable figures who passed stringent, manual identity checks. The European Commission’s investigation found that this system helped the public “distinguish genuine notable account holders from impostors and parodies,” making the mark a practical shorthand for trust.

That changed after Musk acquired Twitter in October 2022 and later rebranded it as X in July 2023. The company began selling “verified” status via an $8-per-month subscription, without what regulators describe as “meaningful verification of who is behind the account.” Paying, not proving identity, became the path to the blue symbol.

According to the Commission, this shift meant a scammer could purchase credibility faster than a victim or legitimate account could flag abuse. What had been earned validation, anchored in verification, became a paid feature that, in the EU’s view, misled people about who was real and who was not.

Three Breaches, One Pattern

Elon Musk was spectacular as the closing TED 2017 interview this morning Here is the video and a summary rom the TED Blog Why are you boring We re trying to dig a hole under LA and this is to create the beginning of what will be a 3D network of tunnels to alleviate congestion Musk says describing the work of his new project The Boring Company Musk shows a video of what this system could look like with an electric car-skate attached to an elevator from street level that brings your car vertically underground into a tunnel There s no speed limit in the tunnel - and the car-skates are being designed to achieve speeds of 200 km h or about 130 mph You should be able to get from Westwood to LAX in 5-6 minutes Musk says Why aren t flying cars a better solution I do rockets so I like things that fly Musk says There s a challenge of flying cars in that they ll be quite noisy If something s flying over your head a whole bunch of flying cars going all over the place that is not an anxiety-reducing situation You ll be thinking Did they service their hubcap or is it going to come off and guillotine me How will these tunnels tie in with Hyperloop The Hyperloop test track is the second biggest vacuum chamber in the world smaller only than the Large Hadron Collider Musk says The proposed transportation system would propel people and freight in pod-like vehicles in a vacuum and tunnels end up being great for creating vacuum We re cautiously optimistic that it ll be faster than the world s fastest bullet train even over a 8-mile stretch Musk says of Hyperloop What s happening at Tesla Tesla Model 3 is coming in July Musk says and it ll have a special feature autopilot Using only passive optical cameras and GPS no LIDAR the Model 3 will be capable of autonomous driving Once you solve cameras for vision autonomy is solved if you don t solve vision it s not solved You can absolutely be superhuman with just cameras Musk says that Tesla is on track for completing a fully autonomous cross-country LA to New York trip by the end of 2017 November or December of this year we should be able to go from a parking lot in California to a parking lot in New York no controls touched at any point during the entire journey Musk says More news from Tesla a semi truck which Musk reveals with a teaser photo It s a heavy-duty long-range semi meant to alleviate heavy-duty trucking With the Tesla Semi we want to show that an electric truck actually can out-torque any diesel semi If you had a tug of war competition the Tesla Semi will tug the diesel semi uphill Musk says And it s nimble - it can be driven around like a sports car he says What else is going electric Showing a concept photo of a house with a Tesla in the driveway Powerwalls on the side of the house and a solar glass roof Musk talks about his vision for the home of the future Most houses in the US he says have enough roof area for solar panels to power all the needs of the house Eventually almost all houses will have a solar roof he says Fast forward 15 years from now it ll be unusual to have a roof that doesn t have solar And to store all that electricity needed to power our homes and cars Musk has made a huge bet on lithium-ion batteries Moving on to a discussion of the Gigafactory a massive diamond-shaped lithium-ion battery factory near Sparks Nevada Musk talks about how power will be stored in the future When it s running full speed you can t see the cells without a strobe light Musk says as a video of the factory pumping out Li-ion batteries plays behind him Musk thinks we ll need about 100 such factories to power the world in a future where we don t feel guilty about using and producing energy and Tesla plans to announce locations for another four Gigafactories late this year We need to address a global market Musk says hinting that the new factories will be spread out across the world Let s talk SpaceX At TED2013 Musk talked about his dream of building reusable rockets - a dream he s seen realized with the success of the Falcon 9 which to date has had nine successful launches and landings Earlier this year a used rocket completed a second successful mission and landing for the first time in history It s the first reflight of an old booster where that reflight is relevant Musk says Reusability is only relevant if it is rapid and complete like an aircraft or a car You don t send your aircraft into Boeing in between flights What about Mars Showing plans for a massive rocket that s the size of a 40-story building Musk talks about what it ll take to get to Mars The thrust level for this configuration is about four times the thrust of a Saturn V moon rocket the biggest rocket humanity has ever created he says In units of 747s this would be the thrust equivalent of 120 747s with all engines blazing The rocket is so massive that it could take a fully-loaded 747 as cargo While it may seem large now future spacecraft will make this look like a rowboat Musk says And when can we can hope to see it Musk thinks the Interplanetary Transport System SpaceX revealed earlier this year will take 8-10 years to build Our internal targets are more aggressive he says There have to be reasons that you get up in the morning and you want to live Why do you want to live What s the point What inspires you What do you love about the future If the future does not include being out there among the stars and being a multi-planet species I find that incredibly depressing Musk says But why work on projects like getting to Mars when we have so many problems here on Earth Sustainable energy will happen no matter what out of necessity Musk says If you don t have sustainable energy you have unsustainable energy The fundamental value of a company like Tesla is the degree to which it accelerates the advent of sustainable energy faster than it would otherwise occur he says But becoming a multi-planet species isn t inevitable If you look at the progress in space in 1969 we were able to send somebody to the moon Then we had the space shuttle which could only take people to low-Earth orbit Now we take no one to orbit That s the trend - it s down to nothing We re mistaken when we think technology automatically improves It only improves if a lot of people work very hard to make it better What s your motivation The value of beauty and inspiration is very much underrated no question Musk says But I want to be clear I m not trying to be anyone s savior I m just trying to think about the future and not be sad
Photo by Steve Jurvetson from Menlo Park USA on Wikimedia

In its December 5 ruling, the Commission detailed three distinct infringements. Of the €120 million total, €45 million was linked to what it labeled a deceptive verification system. Another €35 million addressed failures in advertising transparency. The remaining €40 million penalized X for obstructing independent researchers’ access to public data.

Taken together, regulators said these problems formed a pattern. Rather than seeing them as isolated glitches, the Commission concluded they revealed a systemic refusal to comply with EU obligations designed to protect users from scams, disinformation, and other online harms. The breaches, officials argued, made it harder for regulators, civil society groups, and academic researchers to identify risks and hold the platform to account.

Under the DSA, major platforms must be clear about who is paying for ads, how targeting works, and how they manage systemic risks such as misinformation and manipulation. In the X case, the Commission found gaps in each of these areas.

Ad Transparency and Research Access

Woman studying at desk with documents laptop and coffee in a cozy library setting
Photo by Ron Lach on Pexels

Behind X’s public interface sits an advertising repository meant to show which messages are being promoted, who paid for them, and which users they are aimed at. This type of database is central to the DSA’s transparency goals, giving watchdogs and researchers the tools to trace scams, track misleading promotions, and monitor influence campaigns.

The Commission found that X’s implementation fell short. Officials said the company “imposes design features and access barriers,” including long delays in processing researchers’ requests. More significantly, they concluded that the ads library “lacks critical information, such as content and the legal entity paying for advertisements,” undermining its usefulness for oversight.

The third violation focused on how X treats independent research on its public data. According to the ruling, “X does not allow researchers to access its public data independently” and instead relies on internal processes that create “unnecessary barriers.” For academics, nonprofits, and civil society organizations studying how algorithms spread misinformation, target young users, or shape elections in the EU, this amounted to being shut out of a key arena of public life.

Comparison With TikTok and Political Fallout

The same day it ruled on X, the Commission reached a different outcome with TikTok. The video platform, owned by China-based ByteDance, moved quickly to settle its DSA case, committing to provide ad repositories, keep them updated within 24 hours, and disclose targeting criteria in line with the law’s transparency requirements. In public comments, EU officials highlighted that they had “secured TikTok’s commitment to enhance ad transparency,” underscoring the contrast with X’s stance.

In Washington, the decision sparked immediate political reaction. Vice President JD Vance criticized the move, saying the EU should support free expression rather than penalize American companies. Secretary of State Marco Rubio went further, calling the fine “an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people” and linking it to broader concerns about overseas restrictions on U.S.-based online speech. Musk replied “Absolutely” on X, aligning himself with the view that the enforcement action amounted to censorship.

The confrontation escalated when Musk barred the European Commission from advertising on X. After EU executive vice-president Henna Virkkunen stated that “deceiving users with blue checkmarks, obscuring information on ads, and shutting out researchers have no place online in the EU,” Musk’s decision effectively blocked the regulator from spending public money on the platform, turning a regulatory clash into an open standoff.

What Comes Next for X and the DSA

a lit up twitter logo in the dark
Photo by ilgmyzin on Unsplash

Under the Commission’s order, X now faces strict timelines. The company has 60 working days to demonstrate how it will correct what regulators describe as blue-check fraud, or risk “periodic penalty payments.” It has 90 days to submit and begin implementing an action plan on advertising transparency and researcher access.

The DSA allows for far larger penalties in serious or repeated cases, up to 6 percent of a company’s global annual revenue. For X, depending on how turnover is calculated, that ceiling could exceed $500 million. Musk can appeal the decision in EU courts or propose detailed remedial steps; for now, the platform has not set out a comprehensive public compliance strategy.

Beyond X, the ruling is a test of whether the DSA can become a global benchmark for regulating large online platforms. European officials argue that, just as other sectors accept local safety and consumer rules, tech giants operating in the bloc must respect its “sovereign right” to set standards for digital services used by its 450 million residents.

The blue checkmark, once a simple symbol of authenticity, now sits at the center of this broader struggle over transparency, accountability, and who defines trust online. Whether X restores verification to a proof-of-identity role, opens its advertising and data systems to scrutiny, and cooperates with independent research will help determine not only the future of one platform, but the real-world force of the EU’s new digital rulebook.

Sources:
European Commission Press Release IP/25/2934, December 5, 2025; European Commission Digital Services Act enforcement decision
Wikipedia Twitter Verification article; Business Insider timeline of Elon Musk’s Twitter Blue verification rollout (2022)
Reuters/NDTV reporting on political responses from JD Vance and Marco Rubio; BBC reporting on X’s ban of European Commission advertising (December 8, 2025)
TechCrunch/Al Jazeera reporting on DSA penalties; European Union Digital Services Act enforcement documentation and transparency requirements