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EU REGULATIONS COST BILLIONS FOR AMERICAN TECH COMPANIES
AppleMagazine
|January 30, 2026
European Union digital regulations are increasingly reshaping how American technology companies operate, with financial, operational, and strategic consequences that extend far beyond Europe's borders.
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A new report argues that the cumulative effect of the EU's Digital Markets Act and Digital Services Act is already costing U.S.-based firms billions of dollars, while also influencing which online services, features, and content remain available to users on both sides of the Atlantic.
The findings add fresh fuel to an intensifying transatlantic debate over digital sovereignty, competition policy, and free expression. While EU officials frame the laws as essential guardrails for competition and consumer protection, critics in the United States say the rules amount to an expensive regulatory drag that disproportionately targets American companies and indirectly shapes the global internet.
WHAT THE NEW REPORT CLAIMS
According to a study released by Consumers’ Defense, compliance with the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and Digital Services Act (DSA) has already imposed an estimated $5.3 billion in costs on U.S. technology firms. Those costs include engineering changes, legal reviews, compliance staffing, product redesigns, and the ongoing operational burden of adhering to EU-specific rules.
The report argues that these costs are not confined to Europe. Because many platforms operate globally with shared infrastructure, companies often apply EU-mandated changes worldwide rather than maintaining fragmented versions of their services. As a result, American users may see altered features, restricted functionality, or reduced content availability driven by European regulation rather than U.S. law.
THE DIGITAL MARKETS ACT AND ITS REACHThis story is from the January 30, 2026 edition of AppleMagazine.
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