Trump Administration Threatens Retaliation Over EU's DMA and DSA Enforcement Against U.S. Tech - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Trump Administration Threatens Retaliation Over EU's DMA and DSA Enforcement Against U.S. Tech

The Trump administration is pressuring the European Union to cut down on regulations that impact tech companies like Google, Apple, Amazon, and Meta.

european union eu
The Office of the United States Trade Representative today posted a message to the European Union on social media, threatening retaliation if the EU continues to target U.S. companies. The post says the U.S. will implement fees and restrictions on foreign services, and it specifically names European companies like Accenture, DHL, Mistral, SAP, Spotify, and Siemens.

The European Union and certain EU Member States have persisted in a continuing course of discriminatory and harassing lawsuits, taxes, fines, and directives against U.S. service providers. U.S. services companies provide substantial free services to EU citizens and reliable enterprise services to EU companies, and they support millions of jobs and more than $100 billion in direct investment in Europe. The United States has raised concerns with the EU for years on these matters without meaningful engagement or basic acknowledgement of U.S. concerns.

If the EU and EU Member States insist on continuing to restrict, limit, and deter the competitiveness of U.S. service providers through discriminatory means, the United States will have no choice but to begin using every tool at its disposal to counter these unreasonable measures. Should responsive measures be necessary, U.S. law permits the assessment of fees or restrictions on foreign services, among other actions. The United States will take a similar approach to other countries that pursue an EU-style strategy in this area.

The EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA) and Digital Services Act (DSA) have forced Apple and other tech companies to make major changes to their services in the European Union, and several companies have faced fines. Earlier this year, Apple was fined 500 million euros and ‌Meta‌ was fined 200 million euros. Just this month, social network X was fined 120 million euros for DSA violations, and in September, Google was fined 2.95 billion euros for antitrust violations related to its adtech business.

Separately, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee held a hearing today on the threat that "discriminatory foreign regulations" modeled after the Digital Markets Act pose to American innovation and competition. Witnesses included Competere Ltd. CEO Shanker Singham, Notre Dame Law professor Roger Alford, George Washington Competition and Innovation Lab Founding Director Aurelien Portuese, and Dirk Auer, Director of Competition Policy for the International Center for Law and Economics.

During the hearing, Representative Scott Fitzgerald said the DMA isn't aimed at protecting consumers, but hobbling American companies.

The DMA does not ask whether consumers have been harmed. It does not even ask whether a business has done anything wrong. It asks whether a company is large, successful, and, most importantly, American. If the answer is yes, the rules suddenly change. Common business practices are banned, innovation is treated as a threat, and foreign rivals are handed access to data and technology they could never build or earn on their own. That is not competition policy. That's forced redistribution.

The Computer and Communications Industry Association said the DMA is discriminatory because it only applies to select companies, while NetChoice said the EU has "provided countries around the world with a blueprint" for similar regulatory measures.

Unlike traditional antitrust and competition laws that apply to all companies, however, these DMA prohibitions apply only to designated companies, creating discriminatory treatment between designated and non-designated companies, where undesignated foreign rivals gain an unfair competitive advantage over designated American companies.

President Donald Trump has previously criticized the "very unfair" European Union for fines levied on Apple and Google. In September, he threatened the EU with higher tariffs, which would disrupt trade framework established in July 2025. Trump said Apple should "get their money back" and that the U.S. "cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity."

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Popular Stories

Siri AI

New Siri AI Features Won't Be Available in EU Later This Year

Monday June 8, 2026 11:16 am PDT by
The new enhanced Siri AI features that Apple announced today at WWDC 2026 will not be available in the European Union or in China when they are released in beta later this year. Apple said that while Siri AI will be available for free with the new upcoming OS releases, it will not be available in the EU on iOS and iPadOS until it can find a path forward for regulatory approval. Apple said ...
Siri AI

EU Says Decision Not to Launch Siri AI in Europe Is Apple's Alone

Tuesday June 9, 2026 7:07 am PDT by
The European Commission has responded to Apple's announcement that Siri AI will not launch in the EU, saying the decision is entirely Apple's and that the company sought an exemption from its legal obligations rather than a compliant solution. Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier told reporters in Brussels (via Reuters) that Apple had failed to develop interoperability solutions meeting EU ...
iOS 27 Introduces New Tap to Share Feature

iOS 27 Introduces New 'Tap to Share' Feature, But Not Available in EU

Wednesday June 10, 2026 10:51 am PDT by
iOS 27 has a new "Tap to Share" feature that lets merchants use their iPhone to connect to a customer's device with an NFC tap for the purpose of data exchange. This is useful for small business owners, vendors at local markets, and so forth. Tap to Share is an extension of the existing Tap to Pay on iPhone feature, which lets merchants accept contactless payments on an iPhone, with no...

Top Rated Comments

7 months ago

Good. I'm glad we have a President with a spine who will actually stand up for American companies rather than one who will capitulate, bend over and do nothing for them.
LOL him and his crew are robbing the country blind while these corporates pay them off.

And the uninformed believe he's standing up for Americans... LOLOLOLOLOLOOLOL

Sure he is.
Score: 74 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
Hokay, so, none of these companies are “US Companies” anymore. They are global entities that span far across conventional borders. If you don’t believe that check where they keep their money. Just like when you switch states or counties or cities you are subject to new rules so is it between countries. Multinational companies have to deal with the rules in the place they do business or don’t do business there.
Score: 71 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Naraxus Avatar
7 months ago
Good. I'm glad we have a President with a spine who will actually stand up for American companies rather than one who will capitulate, bend over and do nothing for them.
Score: 50 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
The EU needs to find a new revenue source.
Score: 48 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DownUnderDan Avatar
7 months ago
Well I guess now he has permanently screwed the US trade relationship with Canada its time to get things happening with the EU. Some of the comments on here will age like week old milk, when the reality of destroying trade relationships hits your economy and your place in the world. Right now the EU doesn't compete on phones or social media, but if the right side of US politics keeps acting like a five year old child told its bed time, they just might well in the future. The Trump administration has been working a treat at creating jobs in the European defence industry. Not so great if you work at Boeing or Lockheed Martin.
Score: 46 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago

What he’s going to do about it? Force Spotify to work with Siri….Airplay?… like for real without issues.
Here’s two to start…

- Force all German automakers to open up their infotainment systems to third party App stores. This also includes CarPlay and Android Auto.
- Force SAP to open up their systems to make them interoperable with competing enterprise solutions.

I mean, if we want to do to them the exact same thing they’re doing to Apple. Only seems fair.
Score: 38 Votes (Like | Disagree)