The evolution of the EU consumer protection law: Adapting to new challenges in the digital era

What is EU consumer law?

The first mention of consumer law in the EU was in the context of competition law in 1972 when policymakers started to pave the way to protect consumers in policy. Despite the lack of a legal treaty basis, many regulatory initiatives started to take shape to protect consumers (food safety, prevention of doorstep selling, and unfair contract terms). 

The first treaty-based mention of a specific consumer protection article was in the 1992 Maastricht treaty. Nowadays, the EU consumer law is one of the most and better developed substantive fields of the EU law.

As contained in the Consolidated Version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (the treaty that regroups all previous European Union treaties before 2009), Article 169 specifically refers to consumer protection. Article 169(1) reads as follows:

‘In order to promote the interests of consumers and to ensure a high level of consumer protection, the Union shall contribute to protecting the health, safety and economic interests of consumers, as well as to promoting their right to information, education and to organise themselves in order to safeguard their interests.’

Given its history, it has long been established that consumer law purports to guarantee and protect the autonomy of the individual who appears in the market without any profit-market intentions.  Beyond the goals set out in Article 169 TFEU, four main directives govern areas of consumer law, the 1985 Product Liability Directive, the 1993 Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Directive, the 2011 Consumer Rights Directive, and the subject of this analysis, the 2005 Unfair Commercial Practices Directive.

Since then, there have been numerous amendments to the EU’s consumer protection legislative framework. The main amendment in consumer law includes the adoption of the Modernisation Directive.

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Adopted on 27 November 2019, it amended four existing directives, the UCPD, the Price Indication Directive 98/6/EC, the Unfair Contract Term Directive 93/13/EEC, and the Consumer Rights Directive 2011/83/EU. Even more recently, there have been specific proposals for amendments to the UCPD concerning environmental advertising, known as greenwashing, in line with furthering the European Union’s Green Deal.

What is UCP?

An unfair commercial practice (UCP) is a misleading practice (whether deliberate actions or omissions of information), aggressive or prohibited by law (blacklisted in Annex I UCPD). A UCP interferes with consumers’ free choice to determine something for themselves and affects their decision-making power.

Prohibited UCPs are explained in Article 5 of the UCPD.  It outlines that a UCP will be prohibited if it is contrary to professional diligence and materially distorts the average consumer’s economic behaviour. The EU clearly outlines and recalls that there are two main categories of UCPs, with examples for both:

  • First, misleading practices through action (giving false information) or omission (leaving out important information).
  • Second, aggressive practices aimed at bullying consumers into buying a product.

Some examples of UCPs are bait advertising, non-transparent search results ranking, free claims about cures, false green claims or greenwashing, certain game ads, false offers, and persistent unwanted calls. There is no exhaustive list of what a UCP may be, especially in the digital context where technology is rapidly changing the way we behave towards one another.

This is especially evident in the case of the use of AI. AI is a buzzword that is often impossible to avoid nowadays. Computer Science Professor at Standford University, Dr Fei-Fei Li, said that ‘AI is everywhere. It’s not that big, scary thing in the future. AI is here with us.’ 

AI is used in UCPs to improve and streamline emotional, behavioural, and other types of targeting. Data can be collected using AI (scraping website reviews or analysing consumer trends), and this information can be leveraged against consumers to influence their decision-making powers, ultimately furthering the commercial goals of traders, potentially to the detriment of the interests of consumers.

EU consumer protection

When influencing a consumer’s decision-making powers, AI will often employ measures to deceive and manipulate users to get them to influence their decision-making, thus breaching the UCPD. However, these violations often go unnoticed since most people are unaware of UCPD or dark patterns.

Therefore, UCPs are practices that manipulate consumer choices in a certain way, and the advancement of AI widens the gap between consumers and their freedom to decide what they want without them even knowing it.

What is the UCPD?

As part of consumer law and as already stated, this analysis will focus on the UCPD and its recent amendments.

The origin of the UCPD

The UCPD was not the original legislation governing the protection of UCP in the EU. The first law relating to UCPs was adopted in 2005 and amended the 1984 Misleading and Comparative Advertising Directive. Its scope grew from amendment to amendment, and at its core, the directive has always been based on the prohibition of practices contrary to the requirements of professional diligence as contained in Article 2(h) UCPD:

Professional diligence ‘means the standard of special skill and care which a trader may reasonably be expected to exercise towards consumers, commensurate with honest market practice and/or the general principle of good faith in the trader’s field of activity’.

The UCPD was introduced to establish a fully harmonised legal framework for combatting unfair business-to-consumer practices across member states. This entailed introducing legislation harmonising different pre-existing laws to form a cohesive and understandable legal framework. This harmonisation not only combined existing legislation whilst introducing some key amendments but also provided legal certainty by having one centralised document to consult when dealing with unfair commercial practices in the EU.

One of the major drawbacks from a member state’s perspective is that the UCPD has a full harmonisation effect (meaning that member states cannot introduce more or less protection through national legislation efforts). It implied that member states could not introduce the measures they deemed to be necessary to protect consumers against UCP. Member states do have some discretion to implement UCP national legislation in certain sectors such as contract law, health and safety aspects of products, and legislation on regulated professions, but for the most part, they cannot introduce their own pieces of legislation concerning UCPs.

The goals and objectives of the UCPD are twofold. First, it aims to contribute to the internal market by removing obstacles to cross-border trade in the EU. Secondly, it seeks to ensure high consumer protection by shielding consumers from practices that distort their economic decisions and by prohibiting unfair and non-transparent practices.

The UCPD has a blacklist in Annex I with all the prohibitions it includes. A trader cannot employ any of the practices listed in Annex I, and if they do, they are in breach of the UCPD. There is no need to assess the practice, the potential economic distortion or the average consumer. If a trader engages in a practice listed in Annex I of the UCPD, that behaviour is strictly prohibited.

Past amendments to the UCPD

Before the UCPD was implemented, EU member states had their own national legislations and practices regarding consumer law and specifically, UCP. However, this could cause issues for traders trying to sell goods to consumers as they had to consult many legal texts.

By consolidating all of these rules, changing some and adding new ones, the EU could codify UCP in a single document. This helps promote fairness and legal certainty across the EU. The UCPD has been amended several times since it was first published in the Official Journal of the European Union.

These amendments have covered several changes to enhance consumer protection and include the following: marketing of dual-quality products, individual redress, fines for non-compliance, reduced full harmonisation effect of the directive, and information duties in the online context. In essence, these amendments aim to improve the state of consumer law and protect consumers in the EU. Below is a summary of these amendments in more detail.

Marketing of dual quality products: dual quality refers to the issue of some companies selling products in different member states under the same (or similar) branding and packaging but with different compositions. There is currently no explanation of any objective justifications for the marketing of dual-quality products to be allowed under the directive, as there is no explanation of any possible objective criteria.

The directive’s preamble (non-binding but still influenceable) refers to certain examples where the marketing of dual-quality products is permitted. This can be permitted by national legislation, availability or seasonality of raw materials, voluntary strategies to improve access to healthy and nutritious food, and offering goods of the same brand in packages of different weights or volumes in different geographical markets.

Individual redress: a key aspect of these amendments is setting up individual remedies for consumers that did not exist previously. This harmonises remedy efforts across the EU, as many member states did not have individual consumer remedies. Article 11(a) of the directive will propose minimum harmonising remedies, meaning that member states can introduce legislation to further consumer protection.

Fines: the amendments introduced penalties and fines changed compared to the previous UCPD. The new amendments set out criteria for imposing penalties. It is a long list in article 13(2) of the directive. In addition to these criteria, the new amendment proposed that 4% of the EU’s global annual turnover should be the maximum fine for widespread infringement.

Reduced full harmonisation: the amendments also introduced limits to the somewhat controversial full harmonisation of the UCPD. They limited the harmonisation in 2 cases. The first concerns commercial excursions known as ‘Kaffeabrten‘ in Germany. These are low-cost excursions for the elderly where UCP sales occur, such as deception and aggressive sales tactics.

The second concerns commercial practices involving unsolicited visits by a trader to a consumer’s home. If member states wish to introduce legislation to this effect, they must inform the European Commission, which has to inform traders (as part of the information obligation) on a separate, dedicated website.

Recent amendments to the UCPD

The UCPD is not an entrenched directive that cannot be amended. This is evident from its amendment in 2019 and the more recent 2024 amendments.  The new proposal introduces two amendments that would add to the existing list of practices considered misleading if they cause or are likely to cause the average consumer to make a transactional decision they would not otherwise make in the context of environmental matters.

  • The first amendment concerns environmental claims related to future environmental performances without clear, objective, and publicly available commitments.
  • The second amendment relates to irrelevant advertising benefits for consumers that do not derive from any feature of the product or service.

Additionally, new amendments to the ‘blacklist’ in Annex I have been proposed. A practice added to the blacklist entails it to be considered as unfair in all circumstances. These amendments relate to environmental matters associated with the European Green Deal and aim to reduce the effect of ‘greenwashing’. These amendments include:

  • Displaying a sustainability label that is not based on a certification scheme or not established by public authorities.
  • Making a generic environmental claim for which the trader is not able to demonstrate recognised excellent environmental performance relevant to the claim.
  • Making an environmental claim about the entire product or the trader’s business when it concerns only a certain aspect of the product or a specific activity.
  • Claiming, based on the offsetting of greenhouse gas emissions, that a product has a neutral, reduced or positive impact on the environment in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.

The focus of the new amendments is evidently to reduce environmental misconceptions that consumers may have about a product, as businesses greenwash products to mislead them into choosing them. This aims to protect consumers in the EU so that they can make an informed choice about whether a product contributes to environmental goals or not without being manipulated or misled into believing that it is because of the use of an environmental colour (green) or an ambiguous title (sustainable).

Final thoughts

The level of consumer law protection in the EU is ever-evolving, always aiming to reach higher and higher peaks. This is reflected in the EU’s efforts to amend and strengthen the legislation that protects us consumers.

Past amendments aim to clarify doubtful areas of consumer law, such as what information should be provided and where member states can legislate on UCPs, reducing the effect of full harmonisation. These amendments also introduced new and important notions such as redress mechanisms for individual consumers along with criteria for fines.

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The more recent amendments target trader’s actions towards misleading greenwashing practices. Hopefully, these greenwashing amendments will help consumers make their own informed choices and help make the EU more sustainable by cracking down on the use of misleading, sustainable, and unfair commercial practices.

Given that amendments only took place in 2024, it is unlikely that there will be any new amendments to the UCPD any time soon. However, in the years to come, there are bound to be new proposals, potentially targeting the intersection of AI and unfair commercial practices.

Australian court fines Kraken operator $5.1 million

Australia‘s Federal Court has fined Bit Trade, the local operator of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, A$8 million ($5.1 million) for unlawfully offering credit facilities to over 1,100 customers. The ruling came after the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) filed civil proceedings against the company, accusing it of non-compliance with regulations for its margin trading product.

ASIC revealed that Bit Trade failed to assess whether its margin extensions—a form of credit repayable in digital assets like bitcoin or national currencies—were suitable for customers. This led to combined customer losses exceeding $5 million, while Bit Trade charged over $7 million in fees and interest. The court classified the margin extension product as a credit facility requiring a specific consumer suitability document, which the company had not provided.

In a statement, Kraken expressed disappointment, arguing the ruling could stifle economic growth in Australia. The exchange emphasised its willingness to work with regulators to shape the evolving cryptocurrency framework. The case marks a milestone for ASIC, as it is the first penalty imposed on a company for failing to provide a target market determination for a financial product.

EU reviews Synopsys concessions on Ansys acquisition

Synopsys has proposed remedies to address EU antitrust concerns over its $35 billion acquisition of engineering software company Ansys. The deal, which was announced in January, marks one of the most significant mergers in the technology sector since Broadcom’s $69 billion purchase of VMware in 2023.

The European Commission, tasked with reviewing the merger, has set a decision deadline for 10 January. Details of the proposed remedies remain undisclosed, but the Commission may consult industry rivals and customers before making a final determination. If concerns persist, the regulator could launch an in-depth investigation lasting up to four months.

As part of its plans, Synopsys announced in September the sale of its Optical Solutions Group to Keysight Technologies. This divestiture is conditional on the completion of the Ansys acquisition, suggesting efforts to address market competition issues raised by the deal.

Recent feedback sought by the Commission has centred on whether electronic design automation (EDA) tools offered by Synopsys and Ansys can operate seamlessly with competitors’ products. Concerns about bundling practices in EDA software, services, and hardware have also been highlighted, adding pressure on Synopsys to alleviate antitrust fears.

Yelp adds AI tools to improve user reviews and business communication

Yelp has launched a series of updates, including AI-powered review insights, a personalised home feed, and an upgraded inbox for business owners. These changes aim to enhance user experience and streamline business interactions.

The new AI review insights categorise feedback into food quality, service, and ambiance, each scored from 1 to 100 with sentiment ratings. Users can access relevant reviews directly through the app. Initially available for restaurant, food, and nightlife listings, the feature is exclusive to iOS users.

Business owners also benefit from a redesigned inbox to manage customer interactions more efficiently, reflecting Yelp‘s broader effort to support businesses and users alike.

Trump picks new FTC chair to target big tech policies

President-elect Donald Trump has appointed Andrew Ferguson as the next chair of the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC), signaling a dramatic policy shift for the agency. Ferguson, who joined the FTC as a commissioner earlier this year, is set to take over on ‘day one’ of Trump’s administration, replacing Lina Khan. Khan’s tenure focused on regulating Big Tech, earning praise for her aggressive antitrust stance.

Ferguson promises to reverse what he calls Khan’s ‘anti-business agenda’ and tackle what he terms ‘Big Tech censorship’ and ‘wokeness.’ He emphasises a commitment to protecting free speech and ensuring America’s leadership in technology and innovation. Ferguson’s policy blueprint, revealed in a document obtained by Punchbowl News, also includes plans to counter the ‘trans agenda’ as part of broader cultural battles tied to his vision for the FTC.

Trump also announced Mark Meador, an antitrust lawyer, as a nominee for FTC commissioner. Together, Ferguson and Meador aim to reshape the FTC into a body that prioritises competition, innovation, and what they describe as the restoration of free-market principles. These appointments mark a significant pivot from the current US administration’s regulatory approach to Big Tech.

Meta tax investigation concludes in Italy

Italian prosecutors have concluded an investigation into alleged tax evasion involving Facebook owner Meta, focusing on unpaid VAT worth €887.6 million. Two executives from the company’s Irish subsidiary are implicated in the case. This marks the final step before a potential trial unless the suspects can demonstrate their innocence.

The dispute centres on whether Meta’s provision of free access to platforms like Facebook and Instagram, in exchange for users’ personal data, qualifies as a taxable transaction. Italian tax police argue that user registrations represent a non-monetary exchange that should incur VAT. Meta disputes these claims, maintaining that it has met all tax obligations and cooperated fully with Italian authorities.

Italy’s Revenue Agency has supported the findings of an earlier police investigation, alleging Meta failed to declare €4 billion in taxable income between 2015 and 2021. Meta now has 60 days to address these observations, potentially leading to either a settlement or a judicial tax dispute.

The case, involving consultations with the European Commission’s VAT Committee, could set significant precedents for digital taxation. A final resolution remains pending, with Meta standing firm against the notion of applying VAT to user access.

US lawmakers weigh ban on Chinese drones

Chinese drone manufacturers DJI and Autel Robotics face potential bans in the US under a proposed military bill. The legislation requires a national security review within a year to assess risks posed by their drones. If no review occurs, the companies will automatically join the Federal Communications Commission’s ‘Covered List,’ effectively blocking the sale of new models.

DJI, the world’s largest drone producer, claims the process is unfair, citing extensive security audits and enhanced privacy features. Autel Robotics, also impacted by the proposal, has previously been flagged for investigation over national security concerns.

US lawmakers remain concerned about potential surveillance risks and data vulnerabilities linked to Chinese drones. DJI has refuted these claims, emphasising that no forced labour is involved in its production, despite customs citing related concerns to block imports.

The controversy reflects escalating tensions in US-China relations, particularly in technology and national security domains. The outcome of the proposed bill could reshape the landscape of the commercial drone market in the United States.

Court ruling strengthens DOJ case against algorithmic collusion

A federal court ruling on December 4 has bolstered the Justice Department’s (DOJ) position that algorithm-driven price-fixing constitutes a clear antitrust violation. Judge Robert S. Lasnik of the US District Court for the Western District of Washington ruled that claims against Yardi Systems Inc., a property management software firm, could proceed under the “per se” theory of antitrust law. This theory automatically deems certain actions, like price-fixing, illegal without requiring additional proof of harm.

The case alleges that Yardi’s RENTmaximizer tool facilitated collusion among property managers to inflate rents. The decision marks a significant departure from earlier rulings where similar claims involving pricing algorithms were dismissed. Experts see this as a pivotal moment for antitrust litigation, enabling plaintiffs to pursue cases by demonstrating that shared algorithm use facilitated price collusion.

This ruling aligns with the DOJ’s broader push against anticompetitive practices in algorithm-driven pricing, a growing area of concern across industries like home rentals and hospitality. While the decision strengthens the DOJ’s stance, legal experts anticipate continued debates over whether traditional antitrust principles can adapt to emerging technologies, signaling years of legal uncertainty ahead.

Norway’s Vipps challenges Apple Pay on iOS

Apple Pay has faced its first real competition on iPhones, thanks to Norway’s mobile payment app, Vipps. Leveraging new EU regulations, Vipps now allows iPhone users to make tap-to-pay transactions, shop online, and even set it as their default payment app. This is a significant milestone as Apple, under pressure from EU regulators, has opened its NFC chip to third-party developers with the release of iOS 18.1.

For a decade, Apple Pay was the exclusive method for tap-to-pay functionality on iPhones. That changed after EU rulings deemed Apple’s practices anti-competitive, prompting the company to commit to a more open ecosystem. In addition to enabling NFC access, Apple has also introduced RCS messaging support and expanded app deletion options in response to regulatory pressure.

Vipps’ debut as Apple Pay’s first competitor signals a shift toward a more diverse iPhone experience. While this development could usher in innovative payment solutions, it also raises concerns about potential fragmentation in mobile payment systems. For now, Norway is leading the charge in this new era of digital payments.

Senators accuse FanDuel and DraftKings of anti-competitive behavior

Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) are calling for an investigation into potential antitrust violations by FanDuel and DraftKings. In a joint letter to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the US Department of Justice, the lawmakers accused the two sports betting giants of collaborating to suppress competition in the online sports betting market. The issue centres around their 2016 merger attempt, which was blocked by the FTC due to concerns about market dominance.

Since the merger was scrapped, Lee and Welch argue that FanDuel and DraftKings have used their dominance in fantasy sports to stifle smaller competitors in the online betting space. They claim that the companies, through the Sports Betting Alliance trade group, have intimidated rivals, blocked access to technology, and undermined marketing opportunities, which could harm innovation and prevent new players from entering the market.

FanDuel and DraftKings have not publicly commented on the allegations, and the Justice Department has acknowledged receipt of the letter but has not provided further details. The news has caused a drop in DraftKings’ stock, with Sen. Lee highlighting the potential societal impacts of the companies’ actions.