Here's the actual statement from the European Comission: <a href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_26_312" rel="nofollow">https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_26_...</a><p>It's important to note they aren't creating laws against <i>infinite scrolling</i>, but are ruling against addictive design and pointing to infinite scrolling as an example of it. The wording here is fascinating, mainly because they're effectively acting as arbiters of "vibes". They point to certain features they'd like them to change, but there is no specific ruling around what you can/can't do.<p>My initial reaction was that this was a terrible precedent, but after thinking on it more I asked myself, "well what specific laws would I write to combat addictive design?". Everything I thought of would have some way or workaround that could be found, and equally would have terrible consequences on situations where this is actually quite valuable. IE if you disallow infinite scrolling, what page sizes are allowed? Can I just have a page of 10,000 elements that lazy load?<p>Regardless of your take around whether this is EU overreach, I'm glad they're not implementing strict laws around what you can/can't do - there are valuable situations for these UI patterns, even if in combination they can create addictive experiences. Still, I do think that overregulation here will lead to services being fractured. I was writing about this earlier this morning (<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47005367">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47005367</a>), but the regulated friction of major platforms (ie discord w/ ID laws) is on a collision course with the ease of vibe coding up your own. When that happens, these comissions are going to need to think long and hard around having a few large companies to watch over is better than millions of small micro-niche ones.
by jjcm
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
I hope this goes through. Trillion dollar companies are waging a war on our attention, using everything at their disposal to make these apps addictive. It isn't a fair fight and the existence of infinite feeds is bad both for people and democracy. Regulating consumer products that cause harm to millions is nothing new.
by poncho_romero
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Given how badly scrolling has cooked the brain of the average American, seems like a smart thing for the EU to ban.
by OGEnthusiast
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
They should move to kill the cookie popup
by peterisza
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
This sounds like a type of insanity. Why would anyone care about something like this to the degree they feel like expressing the opinion publicly let alone in a political regulatory body is beyond me.<p>Whatever happened to freedom?
by linuxdude314
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
I see some synergy between this and the "iOS keyboard sucks" thread. Maybe they can regulate that next.<p>I'm curious how they plan to pretend to enforce this. Will you need a loisence to implement infinite scroll?
by tokyobreakfast
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Facinating that they landed on infinite scrolling as the problem to spend time and energy on instead of all the other things happening online that have an impact on society.<p>Genuinely curious about the actual data on this.<p>Does anyone have a link to a reputable, sizable study?
by puppycodes
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Its addictive design in general, but only for Tik-tok. If it works and is applied to others it will be the best thing the EU has ever done.
by graemep
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Forcing designs on companies... wtf is going on here
by mocmoc
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Does this only apply to companies the commission doesn't like or will it apply to the hn app I use, my email clients, shopping sites, etc? Because it seems like the actual concern how good the algorithms are and not the UI.
by causalmodels
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
I admire the EU's attempts at things like the cookie law, age verification, and tackling the addictiveness of infinite scrolling, but the implementation is pure theater.<p>Trackers have much more effective techniques than "cookies", kids trivially bypass verification, and designers will make a joke of tell me you have infinite scrolling without telling me you have infinite scrolling. When you are facing trillions of dollars of competition to your law, what do you think is going to happen?<p>Maybe if there was an independent commission that had the authority to rapidly investigate and punish (i.e. within weeks) big tech for attempting engagement engineering practices it might actually have some effect. But trying to mandate end user interfaces is wasting everyone's time putting lipstick on a pig.
by avaer
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Dunno about using legislative moves, but yes please. The stupidest solution to a problem no one had. Moving layouts, unreachable footers, no or unsatisfactory indication of one's position.<p>All just to remove navigation clicks no one minded and reduce server loads, in exchange for users suffering laggy lazy loading (or, what a hate-inducing pattern!) inability to preload, print, search or link.
by ZoomZoomZoom
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
[deleted]
Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Infinite scrolling combined with the algorithmic feed is the real nasty.<p>Feeds should be heavily regulated, effectively they are a (personalized!) broadcast, and maybe the same strictures should apply. Definitely they should be transparent (e.g. chronological from subscribed topics), and things like veering more extreme in order to drive engagement should be outlawed.
by somewhereoutth
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
I don't know how the EU has time for this kind of thing right now. Honestly
by gib444
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Would it affect HackerNews? The list of topics on the main page is a form of infinite scroll.
by badpun
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
another cookie warning disaster incoming<p>hopefully AI will wake them up and save us from all this nonsense
by slopusila
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Jesus the EU is becoming a dystopian nightmare.
by spiderice
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
Watch what governments do, not what they say.<p>This isn’t about addiction, it’s about censorship. If you limit the amount of time someone can spend getting information, and make it inconvenient with UI changes, it’s much harder to have embarrassing information spread to the masses.<p>Amazingly, the public will generally nod along anyway when they read governmental press releases and say “yes, yes, it’s for my safety.”
by ARandomerDude
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM
I have a proud European coworker trying to get their H1B...<p>They talk about how great Europe is, how they like their 1-2 hour coffee/smoke breaks... These kind of moves give me that same vibe.<p>But why are so many Europeans trying to move to the US? Why isn't the opposite happening?<p>My hypothesis is that these kind of popular policies are short sighted. They are super popular, they use intuition and feeling. But maybe there is something missing. The unadulterated freedom has led people to enjoy these platforms. Obviously it affects the economy. So much so, even the US military has moved from Europe to Asia.<p>I don't typically like fiction, but it seems "I, Robot" was spot on about Europe. (Maybe mistaking new Africa for Asia)
by PlatoIsADisease
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Feb 13, 2026, 10:18:37 PM