Zalando loses court fight against landmark EU online content rules
The EU General Court upheld the European Commission's assessment that Zalando's platform has over 83 million active users monthly, confirming its classification under the Digital Services Act.
- On Wednesday, the Luxembourg-based General Court dismissed Zalando's appeal, upholding its designation as a Very Large Online Platform under the Digital Services Act.
- Zalando argued it is a hybrid service with a retail business representing 61% of its business, and contested the European Commission's user-counting methodology as unclear and inconsistent.
- The court found the Commission justified in assessing more than 83 million active users, not around 30 million as Zalando claimed, and said all could be deemed exposed to third-party sellers' information.
- As a result, Zalando faces supervisory fees and transparency obligations like Alphabet's Google and Meta Platforms, and can appeal on points of law to the Court of Justice of the European Union.
- The judgment boosts EU tech regulators' push to make platforms tackle illegal content, affecting appeals by Amazon and adult sites, with rulings on Meta and TikTok due next week alongside six other designated platforms.
22 Articles
22 Articles
EU legislation imposes certain obligations on online platforms. Disinformation and hatred on the web should be better combated. Now the European Court has decided: The rules also apply to Zalando. By M. Bauer.
The EU Court rejected Zalando's appeal, confirming its status as a "very large online platform" under the European Digital Services Regulation (DSA). ...
The platform is a "very large online retailer", says the European Commission and must therefore comply with the strict requirements of the Digital Service Act, which should safeguard the rights of consumers.
Zalando loses landmark EU court fight against online content rules
Europe’s biggest online fashion retailer Zalando has lost a court fight against EU online content rules, boosting tech regulators’ efforts to force online platforms to do more to tackle illegal and harmful content.
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