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7 Geo. L. Tech. Rev. 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/gtltr7 and id is 1 raw text is: 

GEORGETOWN LAW TECHNOLOGY REVIEW


       A   GENEALOGY OF DIGITAL PLATFORM

                          REGULATION

                             Elettra Bietti*

                  CITE AS: 7 GEO. L. TECH. REV. 1 (2023)


                                ABSTRACT

Until recently, the internet was imagined as a decentralized, horizontal, and
open space that would foster freedom and equality. Today, it is a collection of
walled gardens, a hierarchical ecosystem ruled by a few gatekeepers who
leverage access to data and infrastructural capability to enclose users and
competitors in relations of dependency. Until recently, the growth of digital
platform companies  such as Alphabet, Meta and Amazon  has been met with
regulatory apathy. The  intellectual and institutional toolbox available to
Western  lawyers, policymakers, and thinkers has been grossly inadequate to
diagnosing  and addressing harm  and power  formation  in the information
capitalist era. Now regulatory attitudes toward Big Tech are changing, but
how?

To understand current path-dependencies and blind spots, this Article adopts
a genealogical methodology, tracing digital platform regulation efforts and
controversies between the 1990s and  today, interpreting them as efforts to
contest and  define notions of freedom, law, power, and  democracy  in a
changing society. It isolates three paradigmatic conceptions in early Internet
regulation discourse: anarcho-libertarian, liberal, and critical perspectives.
It shows that these have shaped a similar spectrum of three views today on
how  to regulate digital platforms: libertarian aversion to regulation; liberal
perspectives on  self-regulation, fiduciary obligations, data protection,
competition, and   utility regulation; and critical accounts of platform
governance.



* NYU Law & Cornell Tech, Joint Postdoctoral Fellow. SJD Harvard Law School. Affiliate
Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, Yale Law School Information Society Project. I
thank Yochai Benkler, Jennifer Cobbe, Julie Cohen, Evelyn Douek, Brenda Dvoskin,
Richard Fallon, Urs Gasser, Thomas Kadri, Amy Kapczynski, Daniel Susser, Rory Van Loo,
Salome Viljoen for helpful comments and conversations on this work.

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