EU Orders Meta to Restore AI Access on WhatsApp Amid Antitrust Probe

April 15, 2026
EU Orders Meta to Restore AI Access on WhatsApp Amid Antitrust Probe
  • Interim measures will stay in place while the anti‑trust probe continues, aimed at preventing serious and irreparable harm to competition.

  • This action follows Meta’s ongoing Italian AI chatbot probe and adds momentum to the broader EU inquiry opened in December 2025.

  • Meta also faces other EU probes over Digital Laws compliance, data transparency, and handling of illegal content, potentially leading to substantial fines.

  • Replacing a ban with a pricing scheme that achieves a similar restriction does not change the Commission’s view that Meta may be abusing a dominant position and harming competition.

  • If unresolved, Meta could face heavy fines; Brussels has extended the investigation to Italy, which was already examining the same issue.

  • While final deadlines aren’t disclosed, the language used signals a push toward reinstating third‑party access during the investigation.

  • The plan references revisions during the ongoing probe, with updates aligned to the latest report date.

  • Teresa Ribera, head of the EC competition department, said the pricing proposal does not address antitrust concerns and a formal Supplementary Statement of Objections was issued, warning of an injunction if access isn’t restored.

  • EU authorities view the per‑query fee as effectively blocking access and are prepared to impose provisional measures to stop what they see as a competition restriction.

  • EU rules allow temporary stop orders in competition cases, which can be challenged in Luxembourg courts; fines for breaches can reach up to 10% of global annual revenue.

  • Regulators can order temporary halts on suspect practices, with possible challenges in Luxembourg courts, and significant fines for violations.

  • The European Commission plans to order Meta to reinstate rival AI assistant access on WhatsApp after Meta’s revised policy that charged a per‑query fee for third‑party AI integrations, a move the Commission says could breach EU competition rules.

Summary based on 18 sources


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