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The Politics of Platform Regulation: How Governments Shape Online Content Moderation
[monograph]
Abstract
As digital platforms have become more integral to not just how we live, but also to how we do politics, the rules governing online expression, behavior, and interaction created by large multinational technology firms - popularly termed 'content moderation,' 'platform governance,' or 'trust and safet... view more
As digital platforms have become more integral to not just how we live, but also to how we do politics, the rules governing online expression, behavior, and interaction created by large multinational technology firms - popularly termed 'content moderation,' 'platform governance,' or 'trust and safety' - have increasingly become the target of government regulatory efforts. This book provides a conceptual and empirical analysis of the important and emerging tech policy terrain of 'platform regulation.' How, why, and where exactly is it happening? Why now? And how do we best understand the vast array of strategies being deployed across jurisdictions to tackle this issue? The book outlines three strategies commonly pursued by government actors seeking to combat issues relating to the proliferation of hate speech, disinformation, child abuse imagery, and other forms of harmful content on user-generated content platforms: convincing, collaborating, and contesting. It then outlines a theoretical model for explaining the adoption of these different strategies in different political contexts and regulatory episodes. This model is explored through detailed case study chapters - driven by a combination of stakeholder interviews and new policymaking documents obtained via freedom of information requests - looking at policy development in Germany, Australia and New Zealand, and the United States.... view less
Keywords
online media; digital media; regulation; policy on technology; freedom of information; exertion of government pressure; Australia; Federal Republic of Germany; New Zealand; United States of America
Classification
Media Politics, Information Politics, Media Law
Interactive, electronic Media
Free Keywords
big tech; digital governance; digital platforms; intermediary liability; online content regulation; platform governance; platform integrity; platform power; trust and safety
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Publisher
Oxford University Press
City
New York, NY
Page/Pages
XI, 237 p.
Series
Oxford Studies in Digital Politics
ISBN
978-0-19-769288-2
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0