US threatens to retaliate against EU tech regulation

US warns it may impose fees and restrictions on EU services over alleged discriminatory tech rules as tensions rise after antitrust probes. - FREEPIK
NEW YORK: The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) on Tuesday threatened to take countermeasures against the European Union (EU) over what it described as the bloc's controversial regulations on service providers, reported Xinhua.
AI Brief
- USTR threatens countermeasures against EU for alleged discriminatory actions targeting US tech firms.
- Possible steps include fees or restrictions on foreign services and similar measures for other countries adopting EU-style rules.
- Frustration grows as EU tightens tech regulations, launching antitrust probes and fining US platforms under the Digital Services Act.
According to the USTR, potential countermeasures could include assessing fees or imposing restrictions on foreign services. The agency also warned that it could adopt a similar approach towards other countries pursuing what it called an EU-style regulatory strategy in this area.
The USTR alleged that the EU and certain member states have pursued a sustained pattern of discriminatory and harassing lawsuits, taxes, fines, and directives targeting US service providers.
"The US has raised concerns with the EU for years on these matters without meaningful engagement or basic acknowledgement of US concerns," the USTR added.
The USTR also said EU service providers have operated freely in the US for decades, benefiting from access to the US market and consumers, while naming several European technology giants with expansive presence in the country.
The latest remarks reflect growing frustration among US officials over the EU's tightening technology regulations and lawsuits targeting US tech giants.
The European Commission has recently opened two antitrust investigations into US tech giants Google and Meta, and fined Elon Musk's platform X EUR120 million (about US$140 million) in its first non-compliance decision under the Digital Services Act.
-- BERNAMA
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