• Contact
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Register
Login
European Press
Advertisement
  • News
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Media
  • Lifestyle
  • Video
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Media
  • Lifestyle
  • Video
No Result
View All Result
European Press
No Result
View All Result

Meta Sues Ofcom Over Online Safety Act Fines

8 May 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Meta Sues Ofcom Over Online Safety Act Fines
ShareShareShareShareShare

The owner of Facebook and Instagram has taken the UK’s media regulator to the high court, opening a fresh front in the increasingly fractious relationship between Silicon Valley and Britain’s online safety regime.

Meta has filed for a judicial review of Ofcom’s methodology for setting fees and penalties under the Online Safety Act, arguing that pegging charges to a company’s qualifying worldwide revenue (QWR) is disproportionate and out of step with the geographic scope of the regulator’s remit. A hearing has been scheduled for 13 and 14 October.

The stakes are considerable. Under the Act, Ofcom can levy fines of up to 10 per cent of QWR or £18m, whichever is higher. Given that Meta reported global revenues of roughly $201bn last year, the regulator could in theory issue a penalty of around $20bn, a sum that would dwarf the largest fines in UK corporate history. The fee regime introduced last September applies the same QWR principle to annual tariffs, capturing companies whose user-generated content, search or adult-content services in the UK generate more than £250m a year.

Meta contends that liability should be determined by activity within the jurisdiction doing the regulating. “We and others in the tech industry believe its decisions on the methodology to calculate fees and potential fines are disproportionate,” a company spokesperson said. “We believe fees and penalties should be based on the services being regulated in the countries they’re being regulated in. This would still allow Ofcom to impose the largest fines in UK corporate history.”

Court documents filed on Meta’s behalf by Monica Carss-Frisk KC describe Ofcom’s approach as “troubling”, warning that it would result in a handful of large platforms shouldering the bulk of the regulator’s costs even though the Act covers a much broader sweep of internet services. The barrister noted that QWR is not pegged to revenue generated by any particular service in the UK; rather, once a service is offered to British users, the entirety of its global turnover is counted.

Support authors and subscribe to content

This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.

Login if you have purchased

Subscribe

Gain access to all our Premium contents.
More than 100+ articles.
Subscribe Now

Related Posts:

  • Meta Sues Ofcom Over Online Safety Act Fines
    Meta to axe 8,000 jobs in May as Zuckerberg bets the…
  • Meta Sues Ofcom Over Online Safety Act Fines
    Meta to axe 8,000 jobs in May as Zuckerberg bets the…
  • Gilt Yields Surge to 5% as Labour Faces Leadership Crisis
    $145bn AI Spending Plan Sends Shares Down 7%
  • Meta Sues Ofcom Over Online Safety Act Fines
    SafetyMode Letter to MPs: AI Firm Warns Against…
  • Gilt Yields Surge to 5% as Labour Faces Leadership Crisis
    Onlyfans owner Leonid Radvinsky dies aged 43
  • Gilt Yields Surge to 5% as Labour Faces Leadership Crisis
    Publishers Sue Meta Over AI Training: Hachette,…
ShareTweetSendPinShare
Previous Post

Catholic schools join movement against political dynasties

Next Post

Global Food Prices Rise for Third Month Running | Iran Crisis Drives UK SME Costs

Related Posts

PAL Holdings, Inc. to conduct Annual Shareholders’ Meeting on June 1 via Zoom
Business

PAL Holdings, Inc. to conduct Annual Shareholders’ Meeting on June 1 via Zoom

9 May 2026
Gilt Yields Surge to 5% as Labour Faces Leadership Crisis
Business

Gilt Yields Surge to 5% as Labour Faces Leadership Crisis

8 May 2026
Next Post
Global Food Prices Rise for Third Month Running | Iran Crisis Drives UK SME Costs

Global Food Prices Rise for Third Month Running | Iran Crisis Drives UK SME Costs

Recommended

Celebrity Apprentice line-up revealed as Danny Miller, Alexandra Burke and Gethin Jones join cast

Celebrity Apprentice line-up revealed as Danny Miller, Alexandra Burke and Gethin Jones join cast

19 April 2026
Crease-less foldable Oppo Find N6 to launch in PH soon

Crease-less foldable Oppo Find N6 to launch in PH soon

10 April 2026
5 reasons a romance would never work between Grant and Linda in EastEnders

5 reasons a romance would never work between Grant and Linda in EastEnders

5 May 2026
US Embassy warns Americans against travel to Trinidad and Tobago

US Embassy warns Americans against travel to Trinidad and Tobago

18 April 2026
I’m A Celebrity South Africa live final branded ‘crash TV’ amid Jimmy Bullard, Adam Thomas and David Haye on-air row

I’m A Celebrity South Africa live final branded ‘crash TV’ amid Jimmy Bullard, Adam Thomas and David Haye on-air row

24 April 2026
European Press

European-press.com shares the latest news from Europe and around the world. It covers topics such as business, technology, sports, health, entertainment, and lifestyle. Feel free to get in touch with us!

Disclaimer  Privacy Policy – EU  Imprint 

Contact Us

What’s New Here!

  • Europe Today Explains: Do the UK local elections matter for the EU?
  • Two potential free agent catchers that can bolster your fantasy baseball lineup
  • ‘Time to stop dining out on a lie, Martine!’ Mick Hucknall’s savage tweets to Martine McCutcheon after she claimed she was sick in his hair
  • PAL Holdings, Inc. to conduct Annual Shareholders’ Meeting on June 1 via Zoom

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

© 2026 EUROPEAN PRESS

Translate »
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Media
  • Lifestyle
  • Video

© 2026 EUROPEAN PRESS

Not enough quota to unlock this post
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
×