EU Orders Meta to Open WhatsApp to Rival AI Chatbots for Free

Key Takeaways

- Meta must restore free WhatsApp access for competing AI assistants within five working days or face fines up to 10% of global revenue
- The EU rejected Meta's fee-based access proposal as 'equivalent to a ban' and harmful to competition
- This interim measure will remain in place until the EU completes its antitrust investigation, which has no legal deadline
Five Days to Comply or Pay
The European Commission on Tuesday ordered Meta to give rival AI chatbot providers free access to WhatsApp within five working days. If Meta fails to comply, it risks fines of up to 10% of the company's total global turnover.
This is a rare "interim measure," a tool EU regulators use when they believe ongoing conduct is causing irreparable harm to competition. The order will remain in effect until the Commission finishes its antitrust investigation, which has no legal deadline.
“Today, we require Meta to restore access to WhatsApp for competing AI assistants while we investigate whether the restrictions may infringe EU competition rules.”
— Teresa Ribera, EU Antitrust Commissioner
The investigation began in December 2024 after Meta changed its policies in October to block third-party AI providers from accessing WhatsApp while promoting its own Meta AI assistant. The EU warned Meta in February that interim measures were coming unless the company reversed course.
Meta's Fee Proposal Rejected
Meta did respond to the February warning, but not in a way Brussels found acceptable. The company introduced an access fee for third-party AI providers. The Commission rejected this in April, calling it unsatisfactory.
In Tuesday's statement, regulators were blunt: the fee was "at first sight" equivalent to the previous access ban. In other words, charging for access maintained Meta's competitive advantage just as effectively as blocking access entirely.
The Commission described an "urgent need" to protect what it called a "growing market for general-purpose AI assistants." The goal is to give smaller players and new entrants room to challenge large incumbents. By incumbents, they mean Meta.
What the Order Actually Requires
The EU wants Meta to reinstate third-party AI assistants' access to WhatsApp under the same conditions that existed before the October 2024 policy change. That means free access to the WhatsApp Business API, not access behind a paywall.
Traditional antitrust investigations can take years. By the time a ruling arrives, the damage is often done. A competitor locked out of a platform for three years may not survive to benefit from a favorable decision. Interim measures exist precisely to prevent this scenario.
The Commission stated that Meta's conduct "at first sight infringes EU competition rules" and would cause "serious and irreparable harm to competition" if allowed to continue during the investigation.
Meta's Response
Meta has pushed back against the decision, calling it regulatory overreach. The company plans to appeal.
“This ruling forces us to subsidize some of the world's largest AI companies for free; small European businesses shouldn't foot OpenAI's bill.”
— Meta Platforms, Official Statement
The argument has a certain logic: OpenAI, Google, and other major AI providers aren't struggling startups. Forcing Meta to provide them free platform access does benefit well-funded competitors. But the EU's concern isn't about protecting OpenAI. It's about preventing any single company from controlling the on-ramp to 2 billion WhatsApp users.
Broader Context: EU vs. Big Tech
This isn't the Commission's first clash with Meta. In April, EU regulators found the company was failing to keep under-13s off Facebook and Instagram, violating the bloc's digital content rules. Regulators are also examining how Meta protects users' physical and mental wellbeing.
The WhatsApp case fits a pattern. EU regulators have grown increasingly aggressive about platform interoperability. They believe large tech platforms that block competitors create "walled gardens" that harm consumers and innovation. Whether you agree depends largely on how you weigh platform owners' rights against market competition.
What Happens Next
Meta has five working days to comply. If it doesn't, fines could follow. The company will almost certainly appeal, but appeals don't automatically suspend interim measures. The full investigation continues in the background with no set deadline.
For competing AI providers, this is a significant development. Access to WhatsApp's massive user base could accelerate adoption of alternative AI assistants. For Meta, it's a forced subsidy to competitors on a platform it owns and maintains.
The debate among tech observers is polarized. Some argue interoperability mandates are essential to prevent monopolistic super-apps. Others worry that forcing free access could reduce Meta's incentive to invest in platform maintenance and security. Both points have merit.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the EU forcing Meta to open WhatsApp to rival AI chatbots?
The EU believes Meta's policy of blocking third-party AI providers while promoting Meta AI violates competition rules. Regulators say this harms both competitors and consumers by limiting choice.
What happens if Meta doesn't comply with the order?
Meta faces potential fines of up to 10% of its global annual turnover if it intentionally or negligently defies the interim order.
How long will Meta have to provide free access?
The interim measure remains in effect until the EU completes its full antitrust investigation, which has no legal deadline. Investigations of this type often take years.
Can Meta appeal the decision?
Yes, Meta has indicated it will appeal. However, appeals typically don't suspend interim measures, so the company would still need to comply while the appeal proceeds.
Which AI companies will benefit from this ruling?
Any AI assistant provider that wants to integrate with WhatsApp could benefit, including OpenAI, Google, and smaller startups. The EU's stated goal is to help new entrants compete with large incumbents.
Another major messaging platform facing security and regulatory challenges
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Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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