
Police Raid on X Paris Offices: No Comment From EU Leaders
The operation against X has become a symbol of rising tensions between European regulators and digital platforms over the limits of state power online.

The operation against X has become a symbol of rising tensions between European regulators and digital platforms over the limits of state power online.

Another social media boss stressed that France “is not a free country.”

The ruling of the Amsterdam court shocked the victim who was almost strangled to death by the Somali immigrant last year.

New safeguards were announced as investigations and potential bans begin to take shape across multiple countries.

A row over an AI tool is revealing how aggressively the EU wants to shape online debate—and who gets to push back.

According to a campaigning petition, X Corp. has “legally abandoned its rights” to the Twitter trademarks after rebranding the social media platform.

As part of his spat with the EU bureaucracy, the X owner has called for the abolition of the EU. What if his wish was somehow granted?

Tensions escalating: U.S. officials accuse Brussels of targeting American tech companies—X insists the Commission misused a loophole in its ad system.

How does Brussels still delude itself into believing there is no free-speech crisis in Europe?

The clash between the X owner and Brussels exposes the legitimacy crisis of a divided European Union.