Platform Regulation: Exemplars, Approaches, and Solutions

Price: 1495.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780192887962

Publication date:

15/01/2023

Hardback

144 pages

Price: 1495.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780192887962

Publication date:

15/01/2023

Hardback

144 pages

Pradip Ninan Thomas

This volume provides an introduction to some of the issues and challenges related to platform regulation and the conundrums and paradoxes involved. It highlights regulatory responses from four jurisdictions - the European Union, USA, India, and Australia.

Rights:  World Rights

Pradip Ninan Thomas

Description

Over the last decade or two, a handful of powerful, monopolist platforms have embraced our lives worldwide. They intermediate our socialities and relationships, what we search for on the Internet, and our online purchases. We are living in a global economy that is fuelled by the monetization of affect. One is now only too aware that various platforms are very systematically using the advantages stemming from algorithmic power and platform externalities to mine and privatize personal data that is in turn sold to advertisers who target not just the present but also future economic behaviours of users. One now also hears of the complicity of some of these platforms in data breaches that have contributed to the making and unmaking of political fortunes of key political parties across geographies. This unprecedented power of platforms is, however, being challenged today. Data breaches, evidence of platform manipulations, platform complicities with state surveillance, and their monopolist behaviours and its consequences for competition and data privacy have become the basis for regulatory responses from governments throughout the world. National and regional courts of law have collected a lot of evidence on myriad forms of platform illegalities that discriminate against competitors and that point to the privatization of personal data on a global scale. The proposed volume provides an introduction to some of the issues and challenges related to platform regulation, the conundrums and paradoxes involved, and also to some of the well-conceived and manageable regulatory pathways currently being explored by national and regional governments. It highlights regulatory responses from four jurisdictions - the European Union, USA, India, and Australia.

About the author:

Pradip Ninan Thomas is Associate Professor, School of Communication and Arts, University of Queensland, Australia. His research focusses on media and religion, the political economy of communications, the media in India, and communications for social change. Thomas has written extensively in these areas in all the leading journals in the field, including the Journal of Communications and Communication Theory. He has authored nine books and edited numerous others.

Pradip Ninan Thomas

Table of contents

Chapter 1   Platform Regulation: Three Reasons

Chapter 2   Introduction to Platform Power

Chapter 3   The EU, Platform Regulation, and the Right to be Forgotten

Chapter 4   Platform Regulation in the USA

Chapter 5   The Equalization Levy in India

Chapter 6   The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's (ACCC) Digital Platforms Inquiry

Chapter 7   Platform Regulation: Challenges and Opportunities

 

Pradip Ninan Thomas

Pradip Ninan Thomas

Pradip Ninan Thomas

Description

Over the last decade or two, a handful of powerful, monopolist platforms have embraced our lives worldwide. They intermediate our socialities and relationships, what we search for on the Internet, and our online purchases. We are living in a global economy that is fuelled by the monetization of affect. One is now only too aware that various platforms are very systematically using the advantages stemming from algorithmic power and platform externalities to mine and privatize personal data that is in turn sold to advertisers who target not just the present but also future economic behaviours of users. One now also hears of the complicity of some of these platforms in data breaches that have contributed to the making and unmaking of political fortunes of key political parties across geographies. This unprecedented power of platforms is, however, being challenged today. Data breaches, evidence of platform manipulations, platform complicities with state surveillance, and their monopolist behaviours and its consequences for competition and data privacy have become the basis for regulatory responses from governments throughout the world. National and regional courts of law have collected a lot of evidence on myriad forms of platform illegalities that discriminate against competitors and that point to the privatization of personal data on a global scale. The proposed volume provides an introduction to some of the issues and challenges related to platform regulation, the conundrums and paradoxes involved, and also to some of the well-conceived and manageable regulatory pathways currently being explored by national and regional governments. It highlights regulatory responses from four jurisdictions - the European Union, USA, India, and Australia.

About the author:

Pradip Ninan Thomas is Associate Professor, School of Communication and Arts, University of Queensland, Australia. His research focusses on media and religion, the political economy of communications, the media in India, and communications for social change. Thomas has written extensively in these areas in all the leading journals in the field, including the Journal of Communications and Communication Theory. He has authored nine books and edited numerous others.

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Table of contents

Chapter 1   Platform Regulation: Three Reasons

Chapter 2   Introduction to Platform Power

Chapter 3   The EU, Platform Regulation, and the Right to be Forgotten

Chapter 4   Platform Regulation in the USA

Chapter 5   The Equalization Levy in India

Chapter 6   The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's (ACCC) Digital Platforms Inquiry

Chapter 7   Platform Regulation: Challenges and Opportunities

 

Read More