13.7 C
Los Angeles
Wednesday, April 15, 2026, 02:01 AM
HomeTechnologyThe Social Media Class System: UK Approves Paid Premium Tier

The Social Media Class System: UK Approves Paid Premium Tier

Date:

Related stories

Teen Cricketer Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Set for India T20I Debut in Ireland

A recent development in the electric vehicle (EV) industry...

Trump administration Cuts US Citizenship Renunciation Fee to $450

The Trump administration has announced a major reduction...

Transparency Protocols to Standardize the $21 Billion Resale Authentication Market

The global journey toward a transparent and circular fashion...

Sinner’s Indian Wells Triumph Leaves No More Mountains to Climb on Hard Courts

Jannik Sinner has climbed every mountain hard-court tennis has...

Trump Sticks Knife Into NATO After Iran Military Wins Prove Self-Sufficiency

President Donald Trump stuck the knife into NATO on...

The UK has officially approved the creation of a social media class system. The data regulator’s decision to allow Meta’s paid subscription service gives rise to a two-tier structure for Facebook and Instagram, dividing users into a paying premium class and a non-paying standard class.
The premium class will pay up to £3.99 a month for the privilege of an ad-free experience and a greater degree of privacy. The standard class will continue to use the service for free, but in return, they will be subject to personalised advertising and the data collection that powers it.
This new class system has been endorsed by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) as a legitimate model for providing user choice, in line with UK law. This “pro-business” stance accepts a stratified system as a valid outcome of market-based regulation.
This is a stark contrast to the egalitarian approach favoured by the EU. European regulators fined Meta €200m over the model, arguing that it illegally creates a system where fundamental rights are dependent on a user’s ability to pay, a concept they firmly reject.
The introduction of this premium tier marks a new era for social media in the UK. The once-uniform experience will now be fragmented, with a user’s bank balance directly determining the quality and privacy of their digital social life.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories