How to regulate Facebook and the online giants in one word: transparency - George Brock... - 0 views
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New responsibilities arise from these changes.
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Greater transparency will disclose whether further regulation is required and make it better targeted, providing specific remedies for clearly identified ills.
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If Facebook and others must account in detail to an electoral commission or data protection authority for micro-targeting or “dark” ads, are forbidden from deleting certain relevant data, and must submit to algorithm audits, they will forced to foresee and to try to solve some of the problems which they have been addressing so slowly
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Is the Era of "Permissionless Innovation" and Avoidance of Regulation on the Internet F... - 0 views
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avoidance of regulation that the Silicon Valley platforms
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It hasn’t been a great couple of weeks for the “Don’t Be Evil” company.
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The Supreme Court had upheld a lower court ruling requiring Google to delist from its global search results references to a rogue Canadian company that is the subject of an injunction in British Columbia (B.C) f
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A New Blueprint for Platform Governance | Centre for International Governance Innovation - 0 views
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We often talk about the “online environment.” This metaphorical language makes it seem like the online space looks similar to our offline world. For example, the term “information pollution,” coined by Claire Wardle, is increasingly being used to discuss disinformation online.
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It is even harder to prove direct connections between online platforms and offline harms. This is partly because platforms are not transparent.
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Finally, this analogy reminds us that both problems are dispiritingly hard to solve. Two scholars, Whitney Phillips and Ryan Milner, have suggested that our online information problems are ecosystemic, similar to the climate crisis.
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Digital Services Act: Ensuring a trustworthy and safe online environment while allowing... - 0 views
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The EU’s overall objectives are certainly well-intended. However, many concerns remain, for instance:
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The DSA should tackle bad players and behaviours regardless of the platform’s size and country of origin. Having a specific regime for “very large online platforms” with additional obligations leaves the door open for rogue players to simply move to smaller digital service providers that are subject to a lighter regime.
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To prevent legal uncertainty, the DSA should have a clear scope focusing on illegal content, products and services. The rules should be horizontal and principle-based, and could in a second phase be complemented with more targeted measures (legislative and non-legislative) to tackle specific concerns.
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American Internet, American Platforms, American Values - Centre for International Gover... - 0 views
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Non-Americans should not be satisfied with this state of affairs, which basically amounts to Americans fighting with other Americans about how to run the world.
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that is, the idea that people should have a say in the rules that govern their activities. The Manila Principles, moreover, place an inordinate emphasis on domestic courts to regulate platforms, even though, as my co-author Keller notes, courts lack the expertise and policy-making capacity to do so.
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What all of these proposals have in common, beyond adopting the American free-speech debate as their starting point, is that they treat these large platforms as an unalterable fact of life. They consider the main question to be not whether these platforms should be making decisions for billions of non-Americans, but how they should make these decisions.
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Happy Birthday: The E-Commerce Directive Turns 20 - Disruptive Competition Project - 0 views
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o be as effective as the ECD, the DSA should be a horizontal principle-based legislative initiative, which could be complemented by targeted measures (legislative and non-legislative) tackling specific concerns.
Algorithm Transparency: How to Eat the Cake and Have It Too - European Law Blog - 0 views
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While AI tools still exist in a relative legal vacuum, this blog post explores: 1) the extent of protection granted to algorithms as trade secrets with exceptions of overriding public interest; 2) how the new generation of regulations on the EU and national levels attempt to provide algorithm transparency while preserving trade secrecy; and 3) why the latter development is not a futile endeavour.
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most complex algorithms dominating our lives (including those developed by Google and Facebook), are proprietary, i.e. shielded as trade secrets, while only a negligible minority of algorithms are open source.
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Article 2 of the EU Trade Secrets Directive
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DSA: How Proposed Marketplace Obligations Could Hurt Europe's Small Businesses - Disrup... - 0 views
DSA: Proposed Redress Obligations Could Put Good Content Moderation Practices at Risk -... - 0 views
Online Marketplaces: What EU Lawmakers Will Look at Next - Disruptive Competition Project - 0 views
Will the DSA's Short Compliance Deadlines Set Some Companies up to Fail? - Disruptive C... - 0 views
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