X (formerly Twitter) has filed an appeal against the €120 million penalty imposed by the European Commission under the Digital Services Act (DSA), marking the first judicial challenge to enforcement of the landmark European law. The case, now before the General Court of the European Union, is shaping up to be a crucial test for how the Digital Services Act (DSA) will be interpreted, and enforced—against large online platforms.
The penalty, announced in December 2025, focuses on what regulators described as serious transparency failures, including the platform’s handling of its paid verification system, advertising disclosures, and access to public data for researchers.
Confirming the appeal, X’s Global Government Affairs account stated:
“X Files Appeal Against €120M EU Fine Under Digital Services Act X filed an appeal at the General Court of the European Union challenging the €120 million fine imposed by the European Commission on 5 December 2025, the first non-compliance fine under the Digital Services Act (DSA).”
In the same statement shared on X, the company said the EU decision resulted from an incomplete and superficial investigation, grave procedural errors, a tortured interpretation of the obligations under the DSA, and systematic breaches of rights of defence and basic due process requirements suggesting prosecutorial bias.
“This landmark case is the first judicial challenge to a DSA fine and could set important precedents for enforcement, penalty calculations, and fundamental rights protections under the 2022 regulation. X remains committed to user safety and transparency while defending our users’ access to the only global town square,” the tweet stated.


Why the Digital Services Act (DSA) Fine Matters for Platform Transparency
The Digital Services Act (DSA) was introduced to strengthen accountability for major digital platforms operating in Europe, particularly around misinformation risks and transparency obligations. In X’s case, regulators identified three major areas of non-compliance.
One of the central issues behind the X EU fine is the platform’s paid verification model. According to the Commission, the redesigned “blue checkmark” system allows users to purchase verification without meaningful identity checks. This, regulators argue, creates confusion and increases risks of impersonation scams.
The Commission emphasized that while the Digital Services Act (DSA) does not mandate identity verification, it prohibits misleading design practices. The concern is less about monetization and more about user trust—an area where platforms are increasingly under scrutiny.
The debate around blue checkmark transparency reflects a broader challenge: balancing product innovation with regulatory clarity.
Advertising Transparency Under DSA Enforcement
Another key factor behind the EU fine X involves the platform’s advertising repository. The Commission said X failed to provide adequate information about advertisers, campaign topics, and funding sources.
Under the Digital Services Act (DSA), accessible ad databases are essential tools for researchers investigating misinformation campaigns and coordinated influence operations. The Commission noted that delays and access barriers in X’s system undermine that goal.
This signals that DSA enforcement is moving beyond content moderation into deeper operational transparency.
Research Access to Public Data
The third issue relates to researcher access. Regulators stated that X’s policies restrict independent access to public data, including scraping for academic research.
This element of the case could have long-term implications for how platforms handle data transparency while protecting privacy and platform integrity.
A Turning Point for DSA Enforcement—and for X
Owned by Elon Musk, X has argued that the Commission’s investigation contained procedural flaws and misinterpretations of the Digital Services Act (DSA). The company also framed the case as a broader debate about due process and platform rights.
From an industry perspective, this legal challenge is more than a dispute over one fine. It may define how penalties are calculated, how compliance standards are interpreted, and how far regulators can go in shaping platform design decisions.
The Commission has given X 60 to 90 working days to outline corrective measures, signaling that enforcement under the Digital Services Act (DSA) is only beginning.
The outcome of this appeal could reshape the relationship between regulators and global tech platforms. If the ruling strengthens enforcement, companies may need to rethink transparency models across advertising, verification, and data access. If the court sides with X, it could narrow how aggressively the Digital Services Act (DSA) is applied.
Either way, the case confirms one thing: platform transparency is no longer optional—it is now a legal expectation.
