EU The EU moves to kill infinite scrolling - Brussels is going head-to-head with social media platforms to change addictive design.

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The findings laid out a week ago mark the first time the Commission has set out its stance on the design of a social media platform under its Digital Services Act. | Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images
February 12, 2026 10:16 pm CET
By Eliza Gkritsi

BRUSSELS — Doom scrolling is doomed, if the EU gets its way.

The European Commission is for the first time tackling the addictiveness of social media in a fight against TikTok that may set new design standards for the world’s most popular apps.

Brussels has told the company to change several key features, including disabling infinite scrolling, setting strict screen time breaks and changing its recommender systems. The demand follows the Commission's declaration that TikTok’s design is addictive to users — especially children.

The fact that the Commission said TikTok should change the basic design of its service is “ground-breaking for the business model fueled by surveillance and advertising," said Katarzyna Szymielewicz, president of the Panoptykon Foundation, a Polish civil society group.

That doesn’t bode well for other platforms, particularly Meta’s Facebook and Instagram. The two social media giants are also under investigation over the addictiveness of their design.

The findings laid out a week ago mark the first time the Commission has set out its stance on the design of a social media platform under its Digital Services Act, the EU’s flagship online-content law that Brussels says is essential for protecting users.

TikTok can now defend its practices and review all the evidence the Commission considered — and has said it would fight these findings. If it fails to satisfy the Commission, the app could face fines up to 6 percent of annual global revenue.

It’s the first time any regulator has attempted to set a legal standard for the addictiveness of platform design, a senior Commission official said in a briefing to reporters.

“The findings mark a turning point [because] the Commission is treating addictive design on social media as an enforceable risk” under the Digital Services Act, said Lena-Maria Böswald, senior policy researcher at think tank Interface.

Jan Penfrat, senior policy adviser at civil rights group EDRi, said it would be "very, very strange for the Commission to not then use this as a template and go after other companies as well.”

Defining risks
The Digital Services Act requires platforms like TikTok to assess and mitigate risks to their users. But these risks are vaguely defined in the law, so until now it had been unclear exactly where the regulator would draw the line.

Two years after the TikTok probe was launched, the Commission has opted to strike at the heart of platform design, claiming it poses a risk to the mental health of users, particularly children. The Commission's other concerns with TikTok were settled amicably between the two sides.
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Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images
At a briefing with reporters, EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen said the findings signal that the Commission's work is entering a new stage of maturity when it comes to systemic risks.

Facebook and Instagram have been under investigation over the addictiveness of their platforms since May 2024, including whether they endanger children. Just like TikTok, the design and algorithms of the platforms are under scrutiny.

Meta has mounted a staunch defense in an ongoing California case, in which it is accused of knowingly designing an addictive social media that hurts users. TikTok and Snap settled the same case before it went to trial.

TikTok spokesperson Paolo Ganino said the Commission’s findings “present a categorically false and entirely meritless depiction of our platform and we will take whatever steps are necessary to challenge these findings through every means available to us.”

The right solution
The Commission could eventually agree with platforms on a wide range of changes that address addictive design. What they decide will depend on the different risk profiles and patterns of use of each platform — as well as how each company defends itself.

That likely means it will take a while for TikTok to make any change to its systems, as the platform reviews the evidence and tries to negotiate a solution with the regulator.

In another, simpler DSA enforcement case, it took the Commission more than a year after issuing preliminary findings to declare Elon Musk’s X was not compliant with its obligations on transparency.

TikTok may pursue a series of changes and may push the Commission to adopt a lighter regulatory approach. The video-sharing giant likely won’t “get it right” the first time, said EDRi’s Penfrat, and it may take a few tries to satisfy Brussels.

“It could be anything from changing default settings, to outright prohibiting a specific design feature, or requiring more user control,” said Peter Chapman, a governance researcher and lawyer who is associate director at the Knight-Georgetown Institute.

He expects the changes could be different for each platform — as while the findings show the Commission’s thinking, interventions must be targeted depending on how design features are used.

“Multiple platforms use similar design features” but they serve different purposes and carry different risks, said Chapman, pointing to the example of notifications that try to draw you back in. For example, notifications for messages carry a different risk of addiction to those alerting a user about a livestream, he said.
 
The EU is a parody at this point of dystopian government that make laws for the sole purpose of making laws. Infinite regulation that only succeeds in choking any local businesses while they bask in congratulatory asspats on reducing co2 levels as they import all their food and tech from China.
 
The EU is a parody at this point of dystopian government that make laws for the sole purpose of making laws. Infinite regulation that only succeeds in choking any local businesses while they bask in congratulatory asspats on reducing co2 levels as they import all their food and tech from China.
And on the other end of the spectrum you have liberty land america where corporations can freely rape you and your first born and then charge you up the ass for medication under Obamainsurance via your Obamaphone

Sent from my Blackberry using AT&T
 
The EU is a parody at this point of dystopian government that make laws for the sole purpose of making laws. Infinite regulation that only succeeds in choking any local businesses while they bask in congratulatory asspats on reducing co2 levels as they import all their food and tech from China.
Mostly true, a few of their regulations are good though.

Making USB-C mandatory for devices is the main positive I can think off.
 
And on the other end of the spectrum you have liberty land america where corporations can freely rape you and your first born and then charge you up the ass for medication under Obamainsurance via your Obamaphone

Sent from my Blackberry using AT&T
The USA is in no way close to the other end of the spectrum, the more appropriate is Asian countries where even the most basic civilian protection and safety nets doesn't exist unless you are considered a first rate citizen.
 
Brussels has told the company to change several key features, including disabling infinite scrolling, setting strict screen time breaks and changing its recommender systems.
Sweet, software design by government bureaucrats. You might think fighting your way up the career ladder and battling off jeets and chinks to get there means you know a thing or two, but you're wrong. The legislators are here to tell you how it's done.
 
Sweet, software design by government bureaucrats
It saves time.

The product will never waste your time by having to download service packs as it will never work from day one.
Hackers will never waste their time trying to break into the system as the data will be leaking as fast as it is being entered.
Financial reporting will become easier as you just add an extra zero to the cost every month.
 
None of these platforms are European so they can just block European access with a sign that says “Sorry, you can’t use this platform because the EU is run by faggots”
 
I am tired of pretending that those companies don't employ an army of PHD havers in psychology and other behavior science departments. Their endgoal ist just for you to waste as much time as possible on their websites. If you enjoy it or not. The autoscroll feature is taking away actual agency of the user and completely removes the thought process of clicking the stuff you actually want to watch.

This just opens the gates to shill whatever the owners of these plattforms want. Be it in your interest or not. It's doesn't matter. It's cancer.
 
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None of these platforms are European so they can just block European access
That would be the best thing that happened to Europe in the 21st century, but until then I'll take the ban on infinite scrolling. Even a retarded bureaucrat sometimes stumbles on a QoL improvement,
 
The EU is a parody at this point of dystopian government that make laws for the sole purpose of making laws. Infinite regulation that only succeeds in choking any local businesses while they bask in congratulatory asspats on reducing co2 levels as they import all their food and tech from China.
And on the other end of the spectrum you have liberty land america where corporations can freely rape you and your first born and then charge you up the ass for medication under Obamainsurance via your Obamaphone

Sent from my Blackberry using AT&T

WHO WON ? YOU DECIDE!
 
All I know is infinite-scrolling is a resource-hog, often breaks websites, makes archiving pages ten times more difficult and makes it harder to look through websites. There is a reason why KiwiFarms still uses pages rather than infinite scrolling. Plus anything that makes social media less addictive is good, given how much it has rotted people's brains. I'd just rather not have it be mandated by EU politicians.

Best case scenario? The move will make EU politicians and their globalist institution less popular among young voters due to them being seen as interfering with their favorite thing, while also putting a slight dent in the percentage of terminally online people. Would be far from the first time EU politicians have done something that actively makes them less popular.
 
Is the average citizen of the EU mentally a child? That incapable of self-reflection or self-discipline that state sponsored restrictions are not only agreed to but apparently sought out with fervor to save them from themselves? Or is it just another case of trying to stick it to the evil Yankees and their evil tech platforms?
If you're asking about those EU politicians - yes, they genuinely think anyone but them is a child and needs to be shown the right direction (which only coincidentally happens to be the exact direction of their beliefs in every single case, of course.)

Thankfully the citizens don't agree with the EU, other than a couple leftist-extremists. It's why they're scrambling so hard right now to ban anyone and anything daring to oppose them.
 
On the one hand, infinite scroll lazy loading and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.

Having said that, the EU is fake and gay and shouldn’t be trying to regulate the Internet. Nobody gives a fuck about Europe and the europoors are just going to get their infinite dopamine drip some other way.
 
On the one hand, infinite scroll lazy loading and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.

Having said that, the EU is fake and gay and shouldn’t be trying to regulate the Internet. Nobody gives a fuck about Europe and the europoors are just going to get their infinite dopamine drip some other way.
Agreed. Where's the option to see both lose?
 
That would be the best thing that happened to Europe in the 21st century, but until then I'll take the ban on infinite scrolling. Even a retarded bureaucrat sometimes stumbles on a QoL improvement,
Agreed. I'm fine with either of these options.
Is the average citizen of the EU mentally a child? That incapable of self-reflection or self-discipline that state sponsored restrictions are not only agreed to but apparently sought out with fervor to save them from themselves?
Social media platforms have put billions into studying how to manipulate normies and children to become addicted. People should always use common sense, but it is hard to fight such intense manipulation, and children and teens don't really stand a chance. I'm okay with the EU trying to curb the power of these shitty companies. Don't forget that leaders in tech don't let their kids online, but they'll shove it down your throat relentlessly.
 
I am tired of pretending that those companies don't employ an army of PHD havers in psychology and other behavior science departments. Their endgoal ist just for you to waste as much time as possible on their websites. If you enjoy it or not. The autoscroll feature is taking away actual agency of the user and completely removes the thought process of clicking the stuff you actually want to watch.
The reason why they want people on their platforms for as long as possible is so they view tons of ads. They literally do employ behavioral scientists for this reason, it's to hijack attention, emotion, and the dopamine response so you crave it and come back for more. Colors, sounds, likes, and more aren't accidental, it's by design. It's to make it addictive. If you watch A Social Dilemma (I think it's what it's called) on Netflix, it explains how they do it.

Orienting response, novelty, need for social connections, it get used against you to keep you scolling, viewing and engaging, feeding the machine and enabling even more their ability to snare you.

People like to say 'Oh just use self control and stay off because we hate regulations' but what happens when these companies spend money to erode your self control? These companies are out to get as much money as they can, and people naively thinking they will self regulate otherwise they would lose money or get sued, don't understand that capitalism only works when the consumer still has enough power and influence to push back, not when a corporation grows large enough and powerful enough to influence politicians and actively seeks to circumvent consumer backlash.
 
Infinite scrolling is ass and it creates butt-retards glued to their phones like noisy fent zombies. I'm okay with saying the EU can regulate that...at least in theory.

Now, I don't exactly trust them to define infinite scrolling in a way that doesn't some how fuck over a bunch of unrelated shit...
 
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