EU court rejects Meta challenge to antitrust information requests

Reuters

Published May 24, 2023 03:55AM ET

Updated May 24, 2023 08:50AM ET

By Foo Yun Chee

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) suffered a setback on Wednesday as Europe's second-top court ruled as legitimate the EU antitrust watchdog's requests for information related to its investigation into Facebook 's data and online marketplace.

A spokesperson for the U.S. tech giant, which had compared the European Commission to a fishing super trawler vacuuming up data over the requests, said it was "considering its options" over the court decision.

"The General Court finds that Meta Platforms Ireland has not successfully demonstrated that the request to provide documents to be identified by search terms went beyond what was necessary," the Luxembourg-based General Court said.

The court added in its ruling that Meta had also not shown that "establishing a virtual data room failed to ensure that sensitive personal data was sufficiently protected".

Meta can appeal on points of law to Europe's highest court, the EU Court of Justice.

"We also welcome the Court-established virtual data room, which recognised that purely private information - including personal medical files - has no relevance to any competition investigation," the Meta spokesperson said.