Italy hands €1bn tax demands to social media giants in landmark EU case   

Italy is claiming €887.6m from Meta, €12.5m from X, and around €140m from LinkedIn
Italy hands €1bn tax demands to social media giants in landmark EU case   

Italy has handed tax demands to Meta, X, and LinkedIn in the last formal step in an unprecedented Vat claim against the US tech giants that could have repercussions across the European Union.

Italy has handed tax demands to Meta, X, and LinkedIn in the last formal step in an unprecedented Vat claim against the US tech giants that could have repercussions across the European Union.

While it has been reported that Facebook and Instagram parent company Meta and Elon Musk's social network X were under investigation for alleged tax fraud, it had not been disclosed that Microsoft's LinkedIn unit was also caught up in Italy's pilot Vat case for the tech sector in Europe.

Italy is claiming €887.6m ($961 million) from Meta, €12.5m from X and around €140m from LinkedIn. These figures refer to the entire period under investigation, from 2015-2016 to 2021-2022, depending on the case, but the tax assessment notice now served only covers the years for which claims are set to expire, namely 2015 and 2016.

While the tax claims are relatively small for these companies, the case is significant as it hinges on the way social networks provide access to their services. Italian tax authorities argue that user registrations with X, LinkedIn, and Meta platforms should be seen as taxable transactions as they imply the exchange of a membership account in return for a user's personal data.

In a statement to Reuters, Meta said it would not comment on the details of this case, reiterating that it had cooperated "fully with the authorities on our obligations under EU and local law". It added that the company "strongly disagrees with the idea that providing access to online platforms to users should be subject to Vat".

LinkedIn said it had "nothing to share at this time". X did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

The case could ultimately be extended to the 27-nation European Union since Vat is a harmonised EU tax, and force a rethink of the business model of the tech industry.

Indeed, the Italian approach could affect almost all companies, from airlines to supermarkets to publishers, who link access to free services on their sites to users' acceptance of profiling cookies.

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