Space News from SpaceDaily.com
EU toughens rules on Chinese fashion retailer Shein
Brussels, Belgium, April 26 (AFP) Apr 26, 2024
The European Union on Friday added Chinese-founded online retailer Shein to its list of digital companies that are large enough to come under stricter safety curbs.

The company joins Facebook, TikTok, X, YouTube in a list of 23 "very large online platforms", which have more than 45 million monthly active users in the European Union.

From the end of August, four months after the designation, Shein will have to apply the tougher rules under the Digital Services Act (DSA), one of the EU's landmark new laws against online platforms.

These include implementing measures to "protect consumers from purchasing unsafe or illegal goods, with particular focus on preventing the sale and distribution of products that could be harmful to minors", the European Commission said.

Shein has said it has around 108 million monthly active users in the 27-nation EU.

Beyond the EU, Shein has faced fierce criticism with a long litany of accusations from alleged exploitation of its factory workers with low pay to promoting hyperconsumerism to causing damage to the environment.

Brussels has flexed its legal muscle against the world's biggest digital platforms, launching investigations against TikTok, X and Chinese retailer AliExpress.

Another Chinese shopping app, Temu, is expected to be added to the EU's list after announcing in April that it has around 75 million monthly active users after entering the EU market a year ago.

Under the DSA, the platforms must assess the specific risks posed to Europeans' rights and safety by the content they publish -- or the products on sale in the case of online marketplaces like Amazon and Shein -- and to submit a report to regulators.

They must also provide, at their own expense, an external audit once a year to verify they comply with the rules.

The largest platforms are also subject to increased transparency, with the obligation to provide access to their data to researchers approved by Brussels.


- Taking on Chinese tech -


Shein is not the only Chinese platform in the EU's crosshairs.

Popular video sharing app TikTok, owned by China's ByteDance, has faced the intense scrutiny in the EU -- and beyond.

While it faces a ban in the United States, TikTok is the subject of two investigations by the European Commission over alleged harm to minors.

On Wednesday, TikTok suspended its reward programme on its spinoff Lite app after the commission started a probe into its possible addictive features.

Brussels has also not shied away from wielding its trade weapons against China despite angering Beijing, which accuses the EU of protectionism.

On Wednesday, the EU announced a probe into China's medical device market as Brussels takes on Beijing over green tech subsidies suspected of undermining fair competition.

That follows other investigations in the past few months into Chinese wind turbine suppliers, solar panel manufacturers, trains and electric car subsidies.

raz/del/ach

Meta

X

GOOGLE

Amazon.com


ADVERTISEMENT




Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Boeing's Starliner set for first crewed mission to ISS
Testing the quantumness of gravity without entanglement
SpaceX successfully launches Maxar Intelligence next-gen satellites

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Private investment fuels race for nuclear fusion power in US
Europe's auto suppliers reach the end of the road
Optimizing Grid Integration for California's Energy Future

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Philippines won't use water cannon on Chinese ships: Marcos
Macron seeks to sway China's Xi on Ukraine
Philippines, US fire at 'invasion' force in South China Sea war games

24/7 News Coverage
Floor by floor search for flood victims in Brazil's Porto Alegre
First ever cyclone confronts flood-hit Kenya
Dams strain as water, death toll keep rising in south Brazil


All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.