EU a régi e-mailek és fényképek megadóztatására: Új "adathulladék" törvény 2026. április 1-jén lép életbe!

Since the rapid rise of ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and other AI applications, data centers have been running at full capacity. This massive surge in energy consumption is placing a significant strain on the climate, as recent figures already illustrate.
To counteract this, a new "Data Waste Tax" is being introduced to encourage private individuals to regularly clean up their accumulated data or pay a levy. This new EU legislation aims to reduce the sheer volume of "dark data" stored on servers—including old emails, duplicate photos in iCloud or Google Photos, and unused apps. These redundant files consume vast amounts of electricity in data centers and have a direct negative impact on the environment.
The EU Commission will introduce the so-called "Data Carbon Tax" on April 1, 2026. While the EU Data Act technically comes into force on April 1, it is expected to be enforced toward the end of 2026, giving citizens enough time to tidy up their digital lives. Dr. Ferengi from the EU Agency for Digital Sustainability, explained:
From a climate perspective, we simply can no longer afford to have pixelated photos of all-you-can-eat buffets from a 2018 Tenerife vacation clogging up our data centers. No one needs over 1,000 shots on their phone, hundreds of unread emails, or countless Reel drafts for an Instagram account with 300 followers. We need a radical digital decluttering, and we must all play our part.
Key points of the "Data Carbon Tax" and penalties
Every citizen will receive a free allowance of 50 GB for "dormant data." Anything exceeding this limit will be taxed at €0.05 per GB per month, provided the file has not been opened for more than twelve months.
Providers such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo are legally required to report "zombie data" or automatically purge (delete) accounts if no direct debit authorization is on file. Those who fail to pay the fee for their data waste or clear their storage within a 30-day grace period will face sanctions applied in three stages of urgency:
1. Service suspension warning
Users will be blocked from sending or receiving emails, and the upload of new photos to the cloud will be disabled.
2. Algorithmic forced deletion
If there is no response after an additional 60 days, AI-supported clean-up takes effect. Then, an EU-certified algorithm scans the cloud and deletes anything it classifies as "low value." This includes:
- Duplicate photos
- Blurry or out-of-focus shots
- Images older than 12 months
- "Low-significance" photos (e.g., food pictures)
- Emails without attachments from 2010–2022
- Videos with a resolution below 720p
3. Credit Score Impact
As this is an official EU levy, non-payment is considered a regulatory offense. Continued refusal to pay can lead to debt collection and a negative impact on the individual's credit score.
For those of you who have read this far and are already reaching for your phones to delete those old breakfast buffet photos: April Fools! Fortunately, this report is entirely made up. But honestly—a little digital spring cleaning probably wouldn't hurt anyone. ;)
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