
Perspectives on Platform Regulation
Concepts and Models of Social Media Governance Across the Globe- Herausgeber:innen:
- | | |
- Reihe:
- Recht und Digitalisierung | Digitization and the Law, Band 1
- Verlag:
- 2021
Zusammenfassung
Die Möglichkeiten des Einzelnen, seine Meinung zu verbreiten, haben sich durch den Siegeszug der Sozialen Netzwerke enorm erweitert. Gleichzeitig wird immer häufiger darüber geklagt, dass dies mit einer zunehmenden Beeinträchtigung von Rechtsgütern Dritter und der Allgemeinheit einhergehe. Politik und Gesetzgebung nehmen zunehmend die hiervon ausgehenden Gefährdungen in den Blick: die virale Verbreitung von Hasskommunikation und Desinformation, Auswirkungen auf den demokratischen Willensbildungs- und Wahlprozess sowie die öffentliche Gesundheit.Dabei stellen sich viele Fragen: Wie soll mit dem Einsatz von künstlicher Intelligenz bei Empfehlungssystemen umgegangen werden? Welchen Stellenwert haben die Gemeinschaftsstandards der Plattformen? Welche Designvorgaben können diesen auferlegt werden? Das Buch versammelt hierzu Beiträge von führenden Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftlern verschiedener Kontinente und reflektiert die in ihren Heimatländern diskutierten Lösungsansätze.Mit Beiträgen vonIzumi Aizu, Enni Ala-Mikkula, Alexandre Alaphilippe, Natalie Alkiviadou, Alejandro Aréchiga Morales, Siwal Ashwini, Judit Bayer, Jörg Becker, Konrad Bleyer-Simon, Elda Brogi, Shun-Ling Chen, Poren Chiang, Michael Geist, Gerard Goggin, Giovanni De Gregorio, Sarah Hartmann, Maximilian Hemmert-Halswick, Maria Carolina Herrera Rubio, Bernd Holznagel, Peng Hwa Ang, Richard Janda, Jan Christopher Kalbhenn, Juliya Kharitonova, Kristiina Koivukari, Päivi Korpisaari, Jacob Mchangama, Trisha Meyer, Kilian Müller, Larissa Sannikova, Mårten Schultz, Nicole Stremlau, Maria L. Vazquez, Kuo-Wei Wu und Lorna Woods.
Schlagworte
Publikation durchsuchen
Bibliographische Angaben
- Auflage
- 1/2021
- Copyrightjahr
- 2021
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-8557-5
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7489-2978-9
- Verlag
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Reihe
- Recht und Digitalisierung | Digitization and the Law
- Band
- 1
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Seiten
- 601
- Produkttyp
- Sammelband
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisSeiten 1 - 8 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Autor:innen: | |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- The structure of this bookAutor:innen: | |
- AcknowledgementsAutor:innen: | |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 2.a. Stricter interpretation of platforms’ roles and responsibilitiesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2.b. Wider freedom to platformsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 3.a. Infrastructural regulatory approachAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.b. Horizontal effect of human rightsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. Europe-wide regulation of digital platformsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 2.a. BackgroundAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2.b. Regulatory targetsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2.c. Focus on very large platformsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 3.a. Content moderationAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.b. Illegal contentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.c. AdvertisingAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.d. Recommendation systemsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.e. General terms and conditionsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 4.a. Transparency as a basic rule of content moderationAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.b. Account suspensions in case of abusive behaviourAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.c. Recommendation systemsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a) Upward compatible ground rules for all hosting servicesAutor:innen:
- b) Special regulations for online platformsAutor:innen:
- c) Low-threshold out-of-court alternative procedureAutor:innen:
- d) Trusted flaggersAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.e. Serious crimesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.f. AdvertisingAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.g. Official announcementsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4.h. Interim summaryAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 5.a. Risk assessmentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5.b. Minimisation of risksAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5.c. Audit, data access law, reportingAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5.d. Design specifications and architecture specificationsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5.e. SummaryAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 6.a. Rigid commandments and prohibitionsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6.b. Other commandments and prohibitionsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6.c. Enforcement of market rules for gatekeepersAutor:innen:
- Chapter 7. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Annex: List of Europe’s Digital Regulatory InstrumentsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2. A Traditional Approach to Liability for ContentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3. A Different ModelAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. Platform Design and HarmAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5. Risk Assessment: A Model from Work SpacesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6. The Statutory Duty of Care: A ProposalAutor:innen:
- Chapter 7. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. Introduction and OverviewAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2. Lack of Reliable Sources – Measures against the Decline of Local NewsAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- Chapter 3.a. Limiting the Scope for Specific Categories of ContentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.b. Amplification, Recommendation or Monetization of ContentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3.c. Additional Obligations as Prerequisites for ImmunityAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. Lack of Competition – Introducing Portability and InteroperabilityAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: | |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1: IntroductionAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 2.1.1. Messenger servicesAutor:innen: | |
- 2.1.2. InteroperabilityAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 2.2.1. InterfacesAutor:innen: | |
- 2.2.2. StandardizationAutor:innen: | |
- 2.2.3. FederationAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 2.3.1. CompetitionAutor:innen: | |
- 2.3.2. InnovativenessAutor:innen: | |
- 2.3.3. Data privacyAutor:innen: | |
- 2.3.4. UsabilityAutor:innen: | |
- 2.4. ResultAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 3.1.1. Extension of the scope of applicationAutor:innen: | |
- 3.1.2. Messenger services as interpersonal communication servicesAutor:innen: | |
- 3.1.3. Types of interpersonal communication servicesAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 3.2.1. Authorization to promote and ensure interoperabilityAutor:innen: | |
- 3.2.2. Interoperability of number-based communication servicesAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- 3.2.3.a). Regulatory approachAutor:innen: | |
- 3.2.3.b). Threats to connectivity between end usersAutor:innen: | |
- 3.2.3.c). Providers with significant coverage and user baseAutor:innen: | |
- 3.2.3.d). Scope of the obligationAutor:innen: | |
- Chapter 4. ConclusionAutor:innen: | |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Autor:innen:
- 1.1. BackgroundAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- An outline of the arguments of this articleAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2. The narrativeAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3. The biasAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. The rulesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5. The processAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6. The decisionsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 7. The power shiftAutor:innen:
- Chapter 8. Concluding RemarksAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: | |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- IntroductionAutor:innen: | |
- Chapter 1. Taiwan, geopolitics, internet, and platformsAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Section 1. GAFAM is only part of the problemAutor:innen: | |
- Section 2. GAFAM as potential partnersAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Section 1. Early clashesAutor:innen: | |
- Section 2. Updating the legal framework for ICT innovationsAutor:innen: | |
- Section 3. Combating disinformationAutor:innen: | |
- Chapter 4. Addressing Chinese infiltrationAutor:innen: | |
- Chapter 5. ConclusionAutor:innen: | |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Introduction: Three areas and two approaches to platform regulationAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- 1.1. Hate speech in 2000s preceding the new legislationAutor:innen:
- 1.2. International voices pushed Japan to the New HSEAAutor:innen:
- 1.3. The Effect of HSEA challengedAutor:innen:
- 1.4. Hate Speech on the InternetAutor:innen:
- 1.5. Industry self-regulation on Internet contentAutor:innen:
- 1.6. Local ordinances implementedAutor:innen:
- 1.7. Political and Social areasAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- 2.1. Economic concernsAutor:innen:
- 2.2. The formation process of the “Act on improving Transparency and Fairness of Digital Platform”Autor:innen:
- 2.3. Act on Improving Transparency and Fairness of Digital Platforms (AITFDP) enactedAutor:innen:
- 2.4. Privacy and Personal Data protectionAutor:innen:
- 2.5. Transfer of personal data to a foreign countryAutor:innen:
- 2.6. Tentative ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- A.1. Ancient age to Middle AgeAutor:innen:
- A.2. Post WW II situation of Korean residents in JapanAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Social Media in India: A prolegomenonAutor:innen:
- The Legal Framework of Social Media Platforms in IndiaAutor:innen:
- Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021: A critical Analysis (Illustrative, not exhaustive)Autor:innen:
- Regulating Social Media Intermediaries and Digital Media together: An Incongruous ApproachAutor:innen:
- Flawed AssumptionsAutor:innen:
- Originator Traceability: A NemesisAutor:innen:
- An Inchoate AttemptAutor:innen:
- Regulating OverzealouslyAutor:innen:
- ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: | |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) MEXICOAutor:innen: | |
- b) COLOMBIAAutor:innen: | |
- c) ARGENTINAAutor:innen: | |
- d) CHILEAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) MEXICOAutor:innen: | |
- b) COLOMBIAAutor:innen: | |
- c) ARGENTINA AND CHILEAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) MEXICOAutor:innen: | |
- b) COLOMBIAAutor:innen: | |
- c) ARGENTINAAutor:innen: | |
- d) CHILEAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) Hate speechAutor:innen: | |
- b) The legal regulation of influencersAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) Background: Berne and the Three-Step RuleAutor:innen: | |
- b) Authors’ rights in copyrighted content from the user's standpoint: Are everyday practices of social media content-sharing illegal in Latin America? Is copyright affecting essential tasks on the int...Autor:innen: | |
- c) Should exceptions and limitations in Latin America be reformed in order to adapt to the common practices in the digital environment? Is there a possibility of incorporating broader criteria, such a...Autor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: | |
- a) The particular case of the new law in MexicoAutor:innen: | |
- Chapter 4. ConclusionAutor:innen: | |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: | |
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. Increased need for truthful information on the InternetAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 2. State duty to protect the democratic discourseAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.a. Journalistic standards of due diligenceAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.b. Labelling of social botsAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.c. Labelling of political advertisingAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.d. Interim conclusionAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- a) Transparent recommendation algorithmsAutor:innen: |
- b) Transparent filter algorithmsAutor:innen: |
- c) Prohibition of discrimination of journalistic contentAutor:innen: |
- d) Design specificationsAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- a) Establishment of voluntary self-regulationAutor:innen: |
- b) Case Study “Liberation of Germany from the Merkel Regime”Autor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- a) Hate speechAutor:innen: |
- b) Fact-checkingAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 4.d. Findability of truthful content in user interfacesAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 5. Interim conclusionAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 6.a. Public service broadcaster as “counterweight”Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 6.b. Expansion of entitlements for online programAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 6.c. Further development into a public interest-oriented platformAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 6.d. Funding of public service contentAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 7. Overview of instrumentsAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 8. ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2. The Long Road to Internet RegulationAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3. Change in Government, Change in PolicyAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. A Shift in Approach: Harnessing ChangeAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5. BTLR reportAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6. The Government Responds to the Yale Report: Bill C-10Autor:innen:
- Chapter 7. Responding to a fictional content crisisAutor:innen:
- Chapter 8. The myth of the level playing fieldAutor:innen:
- Chapter 9. Missing economic thresholdsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 10. Removing Canadian ownership requirementsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 11. Discoverability requirementsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 12. Downgrading the Role of Canadians in their Own ProgrammingAutor:innen:
- Chapter 13. The “Regulate Everything” ApproachAutor:innen:
- Chapter 14. Risk to Canadian Ownership of Intellectual PropertyAutor:innen:
- Chapter 15. Mandated Confidential Data Disclosures May Keep Companies Out of CanadaAutor:innen:
- Chapter 16. Mandated Payments Likely to Bring in Less Than the Government ClaimsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 17. Misleading Comparison to the European UnionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 18. Bill C-10 and the Regulation of User Generated ContentAutor:innen:
- Chapter 19. The Bill C-10 EndgameAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 2. Data ProtectionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3. Cambridge Analytica and the Use of Data for Political PurposesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 4. Online AdvertisingAutor:innen:
- Chapter 5. Age Appropriate Design CodeAutor:innen:
- Chapter 6. Competition and Markets AuthorityAutor:innen:
- Chapter 7. Competition PolicyAutor:innen:
- Chapter 8. Consumer ProtectionAutor:innen:
- Chapter 9. Internet Safety and Online HarmsAutor:innen:
- Chapter 10. ConclusionsAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 2. VKontakte Case StudyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.a. Personal dataAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.b. Sensitive personal dataAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3.c. Personal data in the public domainAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 4. ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Autor:innen:
- a. No equivalent to NetzDGAutor:innen:
- b. All-but non-existent role of government agenciesAutor:innen:
- c. Criminal law provisionsAutor:innen:
- d. The Canada-U.S.-Mexico Trade AgreementAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a. Taking Action to End Online HateAutor:innen:
- b. Canada's communications future: Time to actAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- The Commission also recommended that there be “a takedown obligation on intermediaryAutor:innen:
- d. Report of the Citizens’ Assembly on Democratic ExpressionAutor:innen:
- e. Canadian Commission on Democratic ExpressionAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a. Definition of hate speech and hatredAutor:innen:
- b. Peace bondAutor:innen:
- c. Canadian Human Rights ActAutor:innen:
- d. Ideas not retainedAutor:innen:
- IV. The Digital Citizen Initiative Consultation PapersAutor:innen:
- V. Final critical observationsAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- I. Introduction - Balance between State Sovereignty and Economic FreedomAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- 1. Compliance approachAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a) Addressees: social networksAutor:innen:
- b) The most important term: illegal contentAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a) Establishment of a complaint management systemAutor:innen:
- b) The Danger of OverblockingAutor:innen:
- c) Establishment of regulated self-regulationAutor:innen:
- 4. Transparency obligations: Conflict between NetzDG and community standards – Facebook case studyAutor:innen:
- 5. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- 1. Countercomplaints procedureAutor:innen:
- 2. Transparency rulesAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- a) Powers of interventionAutor:innen:
- b) Duty to cooperate – Duty to reportAutor:innen:
- 4. Out-of-court conciliationAutor:innen:
- IV. OutlookAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- 2. An initial response: Criminalising online hate and disinformationAutor:innen: |
- 3. Internet shutdowns and the control of narrativesAutor:innen: |
- 4. Building consensus on interventionsAutor:innen: |
- 5. ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- Bibliography:Autor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- 1. Pros and Cons to an IHRL approach to Online Content ModerationAutor:innen: |
- 2. Article 20(2): An AnalysisAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3. The European Court of Human Rights: A Template to Avoid?Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 4. South Africa: A Good Practice TemplateAutor:innen: |
- ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Freedom of expression and social mediaAutor:innen: |
- 2. Shaming as harmful action onlineAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- 3.1 Conduct initiating shaming actionAutor:innen: |
- 3.2 Conduct participating in shaming actionAutor:innen: |
- 4. ConclusionsAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen:Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen:
- 2.1. Employers’ general obligations and the aim of preventing the risk of hate speech at workAutor:innen:
- 2.2. Employers’ risk-specific responsibilities and responses to the risk of hate speech at workAutor:innen:
- 2.3. Concrete safety measures based on responsibilitiesAutor:innen:
- Chapter 3. ConclusionAutor:innen:
- BibliographyAutor:innen:
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- 2. Policy and theoretical contextAutor:innen: |
- 3. Methodology and datasetAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |
- Facebook (Facebook, Messenger, Instagram, Whatsapp)Autor:innen: |
- Google (Search, YouTube, AdSense)Autor:innen: |
- TikTokAutor:innen: |
- TwitterAutor:innen: |
- 5. Comparison and key take-awaysAutor:innen: |
- 6. ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 2. Disinformation and the threat to media pluralismAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3. The Code of Practice on DisinformationAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 4. Limited impactAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 5. Some suggestions to address the shortcomingsAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 6. Trustworthiness as a feature of the online information environment?Autor:innen: |
- Chapter 7. ConclusionAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Chapter 1. IntroductionAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 2. ContextAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 3. What is PoFMA/ How Does PoFMA WorkAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 4. IssuesAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 5. UseAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 6. Comparison with Other JurisdictionsAutor:innen: |
- Chapter 7. What NextAutor:innen: |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: |
- Autor:innen: | | |Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Communication PlatformsAutor:innen: | | |
- 2. Effects of modern platform economy on public communicationAutor:innen: | | |
- 3. Platform harmsAutor:innen: | | |
- Autor:innen: | | |
- a. Defining a general duty of care standardAutor:innen: | | |
- b. Duty of standards in specific areas (sectors)Autor:innen: | | |
- c. Enforcing the duty of care standard: self-regulation, co-regulation or state supervisionAutor:innen: | | |
- d. Supervision: allocating competences between competent authoritiesAutor:innen: | | |
- 5. Final remarks: do we need a global regulation?Autor:innen: | | |
- BibliographyAutor:innen: | | |
- The Authors and EditorsSeiten 585 - 594 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- IndexSeiten 595 - 601 Download Kapitel (PDF)




