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Targeted Ads Under Fire: Meta’s New Subscription a Direct Result

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Meta’s entire business model of targeted advertising has been under fire in the UK, and the company’s new subscription service is the direct result of that battle. By offering a paid way to avoid these ads on Facebook and Instagram, Meta is making a major concession to regulators who deemed its previous practices unlawful.
The new ad-free subscription will be available for a monthly fee of £2.99 for web users and £3.99 for mobile users, with one payment covering linked accounts. This is Meta’s attempt to resolve the central conflict: how to operate its ad-driven business while respecting users’ right to object to having their data processed for that purpose.
The plan has successfully placated the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). The ICO, which had led the charge against mandatory ad targeting, has welcomed the subscription as a compliant solution. It provides the “opt-out” that was the focal point of legal challenges, including a case settled with activist Tanya O’Carroll.
This solution, born from the UK’s legal and regulatory fire, has been rejected in the EU. There, the European Commission views the paid opt-out as a violation of the Digital Markets Act, not a solution. It fined Meta €200m, arguing that the answer to problematic targeted ads is less targeting, not a new fee.
The introduction of the subscription in the UK is therefore a clear demonstration of regulatory impact. The intense pressure over its targeted ad systems has forced Meta to evolve its model in the UK, creating a new choice for consumers and a new revenue stream for itself, all born from the ashes of a legal fight.

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