⚡ Key Takeaways

EU fines against Big Tech have exceeded €3.77 billion since April 2025, triggering US Section 301 investigation threats and naming European companies including Spotify, SAP, Siemens, and Mistral AI as potential retaliation targets. The May 2026 DMA statutory review is the first moment where the conflict’s structural outcome will become visible.

Bottom Line: Companies with EU and US market exposure should complete Section 301 escalation scenario analysis and maintain EU DMA/DSA compliance regardless of US political pressure — treating regulatory fragmentation as a structural feature, not a temporary problem.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
Medium

Algerian tech companies expanding to EU or US markets face the compliance divergence directly. The conflict also affects the regulatory model Algeria may choose to emulate as it develops its own digital platform regulation.
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial

Algeria has a developing digital regulatory framework (Law 18-05, ANPDP, ARPCE) but has not yet adopted a DMA-equivalent or DSA-equivalent framework. The EU-US conflict provides a live case study for policymakers designing Algeria’s platform regulation approach.
Skills Available?
Limited

EU and US regulatory compliance expertise for DMA/DSA and Section 301 analysis is concentrated in specialized law firms. Algerian companies operating in both markets should retain external counsel for each jurisdiction.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

The May 2026 DMA review and any Section 301 formal investigation initiation will be the key decision points. Companies should complete scenario planning before those milestones.
Key Stakeholders
Algerian digital founders targeting EU or US markets, policymakers designing Algeria’s platform regulation framework, trade lawyers, investment committees
Decision Type
Strategic

The EU-US conflict will shape global digital regulation for the next decade. Companies should treat it as a structural feature of the compliance environment, not a temporary anomaly.

Quick Take: Companies with exposure to both EU and US digital markets should immediately complete scenario analysis on Section 301 escalation impacts and ensure EU DMA/DSA compliance is maintained regardless of US political pressure. The May 2026 DMA statutory review is the earliest moment when structural regulatory adjustments could materialize — monitor that output closely. The larger lesson is that regulatory fragmentation between the EU and US is now the operating norm for global digital commerce, not an exception to be resolved.

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