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Putting Trust into Antitrust? Competition Policy and Data-Driven Platforms

Larsson, Stefan LU (2021) In European Journal of Communication p.1-13
Abstract
Anti-competitive notions, it seems, are increasingly informing the critical debate on a data-driven economy organised into scalable digital platforms. Issues of market definitions, how to value personal data on multisided platforms, and how to detect and regulate misuses of dominant positions have become key nomenclature on the battlefield of addressing fairness in our contemporary digital societies. This article looks at the central themes for this special issue on governing trust in European platform societies through the lens of contemporary developments in the field of competition law. Three main questions are addressed: (1) To what extent are the platforms’ own abilities to govern their infrastructures, that is, to be de facto... (More)
Anti-competitive notions, it seems, are increasingly informing the critical debate on a data-driven economy organised into scalable digital platforms. Issues of market definitions, how to value personal data on multisided platforms, and how to detect and regulate misuses of dominant positions have become key nomenclature on the battlefield of addressing fairness in our contemporary digital societies. This article looks at the central themes for this special issue on governing trust in European platform societies through the lens of contemporary developments in the field of competition law. Three main questions are addressed: (1) To what extent are the platforms’ own abilities to govern their infrastructures, that is, to be de facto regulators over both human behaviour and market circumstances, a challenge for contemporary competition regulation? (2) In what way is the collection, aggregation, or handling of consumers’ data of relevance for competition? (3) How can the particular European challenges of governing US-based digital platforms more broadly be understood in terms of the relationship between transparency and public trust? Of particular relevance – and challenge – here are the platforms’ abilities to govern their infrastructures, albeit through automated moderation, pricing or scalable data handling. It is argued that this aspect of coded, and possibly autonomously adapting, intra-platform governance, poses significant anti-competitive challenges for supervisory authorities, with possible negative implications for consumer autonomy and wellbeing as well as platform-dependent other companies. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
competition policy and platforms, consumer autonomy, transparency and automation, public trust and platform governance, the Digital Markets Act, antitrust
in
European Journal of Communication
pages
12 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85110244557
ISSN
0267-3231
DOI
10.1177/02673231211028358
project
AI Transparency and Consumer Trust
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f890567d-6dfc-4b9c-bce8-65e058b55439
date added to LUP
2021-03-16 19:05:48
date last changed
2023-04-11 08:03:16
@article{f890567d-6dfc-4b9c-bce8-65e058b55439,
  abstract     = {{Anti-competitive notions, it seems, are increasingly informing the critical debate on a data-driven economy organised into scalable digital platforms. Issues of market definitions, how to value personal data on multisided platforms, and how to detect and regulate misuses of dominant positions have become key nomenclature on the battlefield of addressing fairness in our contemporary digital societies. This article looks at the central themes for this special issue on governing trust in European platform societies through the lens of contemporary developments in the field of competition law. Three main questions are addressed: (1) To what extent are the platforms’ own abilities to govern their infrastructures, that is, to be de facto regulators over both human behaviour and market circumstances, a challenge for contemporary competition regulation? (2) In what way is the collection, aggregation, or handling of consumers’ data of relevance for competition? (3) How can the particular European challenges of governing US-based digital platforms more broadly be understood in terms of the relationship between transparency and public trust? Of particular relevance – and challenge – here are the platforms’ abilities to govern their infrastructures, albeit through automated moderation, pricing or scalable data handling. It is argued that this aspect of coded, and possibly autonomously adapting, intra-platform governance, poses significant anti-competitive challenges for supervisory authorities, with possible negative implications for consumer autonomy and wellbeing as well as platform-dependent other companies.}},
  author       = {{Larsson, Stefan}},
  issn         = {{0267-3231}},
  keywords     = {{competition policy and platforms; consumer autonomy; transparency and automation; public trust and platform governance; the Digital Markets Act; antitrust}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  pages        = {{1--13}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{European Journal of Communication}},
  title        = {{Putting Trust into Antitrust? Competition Policy and Data-Driven Platforms}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02673231211028358}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/02673231211028358}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}