big85 1 hour ago

> Evidence from a mystery shopping exercise included in the Commission's investigation shows that a very high percentage of the selected chargers failed basic safety tests, while a high percentage of tested baby toys posed safety risks of medium to high severity, as they contain chemicals exceeding legal safety limits or pose suffocation hazards due to detachable parts.

> Under the DSA, designated Very Large Online Platforms are required to diligently assess systemic risks linked to their services and adopt corresponding mitigation measures.

  • throwa356262 1 hour ago

    Is temu much worse than amazon here?

    • HPsquared 1 hour ago

      There's a lot of work to be done.

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago

      Probably yeah, Amazon already had long exposure to the regulations from EU and European countries, they surely have some won lessons from these years, compared to Temu which is relatively new and might still be learning how things work, apparently. Temu is what, 3-4 years old or something?

      • bonzini 6 minutes ago

        "compared to Temu that does not give a damn by design" would be more accurate.

    • AndrewDucker 25 minutes ago

      Certainly in the UK, we don't have the same issues with terrible Chinese fakes that I hear about from US Amazon users.

      • philipwhiuk 21 minutes ago

        Amazon UK these days is definitely full of Chinese reproductions and drop shipped knock offs.

        Whether they're dangerous I don't know, I've not tried them.

      • maccard 20 minutes ago

        We don’t have the fakes problem but Amazon in the UK has a growing amount of stuff that is just resale of stuff from temu. I suspect if you tested the top 10 chargers on Amazon that weren’t anker, you’d find the same problems.

      • Hamuko 4 minutes ago

        [delayed]

  • pjc50 1 hour ago

    Interesting that this is under the DSA, since if they're the "importer" by mailing parcels to the EU it would also be covered by long standing rules on CE marking.

    It's good to know that someone's actually checking this stuff. Self-reported compliance like CE always makes me wonder if I'm a mug for trying to comply honestly with the rules when it would be easy not to.

seydor 43 minutes ago

I've been buying everything i can think of from temu for a year now , in anticipation of it surely being outlawed in the EU. That time has come.

gib444 1 hour ago

> Temu has until 28 August 2026 to submit an action plan to the Commission, as required by Article 75 of the DSA. The plan must set out measures to remedy the breach of its risk-assessment obligations. The European Board for Digital Services will have one month from receipt of the plan to issue its opinion. The Commission will then have a further month to adopt its final decision and set a reasonable period for implementation.

> Failure to comply with the non-compliance decision may lead to periodic penalty payments.

So they're just threatening a fine at this stage? It's not clear to me

  • nolok 1 hour ago

    No, it's a fine, but the fine doesn't absolve you from fixing it too so it stops. You have this delay to submit a plan for how and on what timeline you will fix it. If you don't do it, or take too long, we will keep fining you, increasingly.

    An exemple what how in the old microsoft case they ended up puttin a daily fine for non compliance until microsoft balked back and fixed it (after they tried to act tough and pretended to ignore them).

    The end goal ultimately is to get it fixed.

    • bcjdjsndon 59 minutes ago

      How do they enforce a fine on a Chinese company? What if temu says "up yours"?

      • mdrzn 54 minutes ago

        you won't be able to sell in the EU market anymore

        • dylan604 35 minutes ago

          Doesn’t Temu direct ship to the customer? What if they ship in plain unmarked packaging and keep changing the address of the sender? Is the EU customs peeps just going to start inspecting every single package from China looking for items from Temu? That sounds like a logistical nightmare. This sounds like old school thinking where you can stop whole containers full of stuff from a single supplier.

          • bonzini 4 minutes ago

            The money has to move from the EU to Temu/Pinduoduo coffers at some point.

        • bcjdjsndon 29 minutes ago

          Say they carry on.... How does EU actually stop people ordering from their website and getting items posted to their house?

          • askl 23 minutes ago

            Ordering ISPs to DNS block temu would probably be easier and effective enough.

            Or maybe getting google and apple to make the app not available in the EU.

          • Mashimo 19 minutes ago

            Maybe going for the money. Forbit EU banks from transferring funds to known Temu accounts.

      • robin_reala 52 minutes ago

        I visited Temu from Sweden and clicked on the terms of use, this is the first line:

        1.1 These Terms are between you and Whaleco Technology Limited, an Irish company.

  • purerandomness 1 hour ago

    Since this is under the "Next Steps" section, it's pretty clear to me that the €200M fine is a fixed one-time fine that was issued now, but further, repeated fines ("periodic") will be issued if the hazard is not removed.

spwa4 23 minutes ago

So they let sellers from china, and reseller platforms, get away with violating safety laws for 3 years (just Temu), have 50 BILLION euro in revenue (about 3-4 billion in profit for the platform itself) from those products and then charge them 200 Million for the crime?

Can European companies demand equal treatment? Wait, no, I know the answer to that.