Spain pushes ahead with social media, AI rules despite Big Tech lobbying pressure


A Spanish flag and smartphone with displayed social media app icons are seen in this illustration taken February 3, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

MADRID, May 13 (Reuters) - ⁠Spain will push ahead with new rules to make social networks and ⁠AI safer despite intense lobbying from the tech industry, its digital transformation ‌minister Oscar Lopez told Reuters.

"The profit of four tech companies cannot come at the expense of the rights of millions," he said, adding that "powerful voices" were lobbying against proposed regulation that would curb high-risk AI ​systems or force companies to disclose how their social ⁠media algorithms work.

Hiscomments echoed those ⁠by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who on Tuesday said the Commission was ⁠targeting ‌addictive and harmful design practices by social media firms in its upcoming Digital Fairness Act.

Amid similar moves by Australia, France and Greece, Spain in ⁠February announced plans to ban social media use by teenagers - ​with a bill already ‌working its way through parliament - and to adopt legislation holding executives personally responsible ⁠for hate speech ​on their platforms.

The move provoked sharp criticism from X platform owner Elon Musk, who called Socialist Prime Minister PedroSanchez a tyrant and a totalitarian.

Lopez said Spain wanted a common European ⁠approach as rules are easier to enforce across the ​bloc of more than 400 million citizens than country-by-country, and warned that backers of a laissez-faire approach would one day regret defending "the law of the jungle."

He linked the push ⁠to growing concern over cyberbullying, sexual harassment and AI-generated sexual deepfakes targeting children, especially girls, describing the impact on minors as a mental health pandemic.

Spain has positioned itself as one of Europe's most vocal advocates for what Lopez called "trustworthy AI," a model he ​said should protect privacy, democracy, minors and public safety ⁠rather than prioritise speed or profit.

Asked whether authorities should be able to identify people who ​use pseudonyms online if they commit crimes, Lopez said ‌anonymity should not shield them from liability.

"What ​isn't legal in the real world cannot be legal in the virtual world. Full stop."

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Andrei Khalip and Bernadette Baum)

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