The Snapchat app icon on a smartphone in this illustration taken October 27, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Snapchat hit with EU probe into alleged failure to prevent child grooming, illegal goods sales

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BRUSSELS, March 26 : Snap-owned Snapchat was hit with an EU investigation on Thursday as regulators warned that the social platform appears not to be doing enough to prevent child grooming and the sale of illegal goods.

The EU probe is under the Digital Services Act, which requires big online platforms to do more to tackle illegal and harmful content or risk fines as much as 6 per cent of their global annual sales.

"From grooming and exposure to illegal products to account settings that undermine minors' safety, Snapchat appears to have overlooked that the Digital Services Act demands high safety standards for all users," EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen said in a statement.

The European Commission, charged with enforcing the act, said it suspected that Snapchat does not have sufficient safeguards to prevent children from being contacted by users looking to exploit them sexually or for criminal activities.

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It said the company's content moderation tools were ineffective in preventing the spread of information pointing users to the sale of illegal products such as drugs or age-restricted products such as vapes and alcohol.

The Commission said it will take over Dutch regulators' investigation opened last September into the sales of vapes to children on Snapchat.

Other areas of EU concern include Snapchat's self-declaration age assurance tool which regulators said is insufficient, its inadequate default account settings, and its mechanisms to allow users to report dark patterns in its design.

Source: Reuters

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