H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

EU accuses China’s AliExpress of ‘systemic failure’ over illegal goods

about 8 hours ago
A picture


The European Commission has accused the online retailer AliExpress of a “systemic failure” to prevent the sale of illegal and dangerous goods on its platform, as Brussels steps up its case against the Chinese company.Issuing formal findings of an investigation launched in March last year, EU regulators said on Wednesday that AliExpress was failing to do enough to prevent the sale of counterfeit clothes and dangerous children’s toys, among other items.The company, which claims 104 million monthly users in the EU, did not devote enough resources to content moderation to take down illegal goods on sale on its platform, regulators said.An EU official said the company – which is owned by Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce group founded by the Chinese billionaire Jack Ma – had “underestimated the general risk of the sale of illegal products”.The official added: “General measures they have in place to avoid the dissemination of illegal products do not work properly – it shows a systemic failure.

”The European Commission said these were preliminary findings, pending further investigation and responses from AliExpress.If EU officials uphold the verdict, the company can in theory be fined up to 6% of global turnover under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA).AliExpress has, however, persuaded EU regulators to close aspects of their investigation, by pledging to take action to tackle “hidden links” that take users to an illegal product via a legitimate one.The online marketplace promised to develop a system to monitor and detect hidden links to illegal products, such as food supplements and medicines, which have been offered for sale via legitimate items.Such hidden links were also said to have taken children to pornographic material.

AliExpress also promised greater transparency over its advertising systems and availability of its data to researchers, which Brussels said addressed concerns in these areas,The European Commission described the commitments as “legally binding” and said AliExpress could face fines if it failed to follow through,The investigation comes under the DSA, which is intended to protect people from online harms such as disinformation, illegal content and dangerous products,The act imposes the strictest requirements on the largest companies with more than 45 million users, including Amazon, Google, Meta and X,AliExpress said it had “proactively engaged and closely collaborated with the European Commission throughout this process” and would continue to do so.

“The commission has recognised our committed approach to ensure a high level of consumer protection and transparency through the breadth and depth of these voluntary commitments offered and agreed,” it said.“We are confident that a positive and compliant result will be achieved through continuing our mutual dialogue with the commission to address any remaining concerns on the DSA.”Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionLast year, the UK consumer group Which? found dangerous and illegal children’s toys for sale on several websites including AliExpress.The consumer group bought 23 toys from seven platforms and found problems with more than half the items, including toys from AliExpress that broke into small pieces, or had sharp edges that could puncture a small child’s skin.The products were removed from sale after Which? alerted the companies.

AliExpress said at the time it was working with regulators to prevent non-compliant products from being sold.The European Consumer Organisation, whose members include Which?, welcomed Brussels’ actions on Wednesday.“It is now very important that the commission monitors whether the commitments AliExpress has agreed to are respected and if they are not, the commission should take more deterrent action,” the group’s director general, Agustín Reyna, said.
sportSee all
A picture

Four leading British basketball clubs blocked from Europe as civil war deepens

The civil war engulfing British Basketball has intensified with the British Basketball Federation attempting to block four of the country’s leading clubs from competing in Europe next season.The Guardian has learned that the BBF is refusing to endorse applications for European places made by Manchester Basketball, London Lions, Newcastle Eagles and Bristol Flyers, which has put their participation at risk.In another development, it is being claimed that the BBF is threatening to thwart visa applications for overseas players for next season made by a number of Super League Basketball clubs.The BBF and clubs are at loggerheads after the governing body last month awarded a 15-year licence to operate a new Great Britain Basketball League from the 2026-27 season to an American consortium led by the former NBA executive Marshall Glickman. The nine existing SLB clubs are refusing to join, and have had their interim licence to run their own league next season suspended by the BBF

about 6 hours ago
A picture

Munster’s monster hits shows why Queensland captain’s time has come

Moderation is often cited as the secret to a long and fulfilling life. Semi-regular exercise. The odd glass of red wine. Precious time with family and friends. And no more than a sprinkling of Cameron Munster

about 6 hours ago
A picture

‘It’s going to be pretty monumental’: Harry Potter eyes Wallabies spot for Lions series | Jack Snape

No, Harry Potter – the Australian rugby union winger – hasn’t read the books. And the 27-year-old is unlikely to get to them anytime soon, given his focus on securing a precious place in the Wallabies’ team for the coming tour of the British and Irish Lions.“It’s a massive, once-in-every-12-years event,” he says in the days before the first Wallabies squad of the year is named on Thursday. “It’s going to be pretty monumental.”The Western Force player has perhaps the best name in Australian sport

about 7 hours ago
A picture

State of Origin 2025 Game 2: Qld Maroons beat NSW Blues 26-24 – as it happened

All eyes now turn to Sydney and the Game 3 decider on Wednesday 9th of July. I will be back there to see who lifts the State of Origin shield. Until then, I’ll leave you with Jack Snape’s match report from tonight’s chaotic classic. Catch you soon.A quick look at social media and it appears NSW fans have some polite concerns with the refereeing of Ashley Klein

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Queensland stay alive after holding off stirring NSW comeback in State of Origin classic

They had been all but written off, rudderless and adrift with a rattled coach at the helm, but a spirited Queensland kept the State of Origin shield alive after a wet, wild and often bizarre Game 2 victory over New South Wales in Perth.The memorable 26-24 triumph wasn’t certain until the final moments after a titanic Blues comeback – highlighted by a Brian To’o hat-trick – brought them back to within two points with eight minutes to go.Yet the Maroons’ heroic defence in the dying stages was capped off by new Maroons captain Cameron Munster and recalled backrower Kurt Capewell, having faced repeat sets, who forced an error from Blues prop Payne Haas with another gritty tackle.The Blues’ final set ended in an error from fullback Dylan Edwards, securing one of the great Origin victories and triggering a mix of relief and celebration for the weary Queenslanders.The Maroons had scored four tries to five for the Blues

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Florida is now the Stanley Cup’s semi-permanent home. What does that mean for Canada?

“There are a lot of things I do not understand about this proposed expansion,” New York Times sports columnist George Vecsey wrote in December 1992, as the NHL wrapped up its annual Board of Governors meeting in Palm Beach, Florida. During that week’s meeting, the league received expansion proposals for two teams. One was for a team in Anaheim, California, backed by Disney. The other was for a team in Miami, Florida, put forward by waste management-and-VHS-video magnate, Wayne Huizenga. “What makes it think the Sun Belt is ready for all these hockey teams?” Vecsey wondered

about 9 hours ago
businessSee all
A picture

UK transport secretary calls HS2 an ‘appalling mess’ as she confirms delay - as it happened

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Women more worried about economy under Trump than men, poll finds

about 11 hours ago
A picture

UK inflation eases slightly to 3.4% as food price rises offset transport cost falls

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Qantas rebounds from worst-ever performance to be named world’s 14th best airline in ranking

about 15 hours ago
A picture

Optus agrees to $100m penalty for selling phones to customers who couldn’t afford them or were out of range

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Trump threatens to keep 25% tariff on UK steel imports over Port Talbot concerns

1 day ago