Commission fines Temu €200 million for breaching the Digital Services Act
EU DSA enforcement sets a precedent for platform risk assessment obligations - but this item is not materially about AI governance.
Key points
- The European Commission fined Temu €200 million for failing to meet DSA systemic risk assessment obligations.
- The case centres on inadequate risk assessment of illegal products and recommender system amplification - not AI governance directly.
- Limited direct relevance to Australian federal AI governance; DSA enforcement is EU-specific and not AI-focused.
View original source
Copied.
"Commission fines Temu €200 million for breaching the Digital Services Act"
Source: EU Digital Strategy – News
Published: 28 May 2026
URL: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/commission-fines-temu-eu200-million-breaching-digital-services-act
The European Commission has issued a €200 million fine against Temu under the Digital Services Act for failing to adequately identify and assess systemic risks associated with illegal products on its platform. Evidence from mystery shopping exercises found high failure rates among tested chargers and baby toys. The Commission found Temu's 2024 risk assessment relied on generic sector-level information rather than platform-specific evidence, and failed to account for how recommender systems and influencer promotion programmes could amplify exposure to illegal goods. This is a DSA compliance and consumer safety matter rather than an AI governance development.
Retrieved from SIMS, 18 July 2026.