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Autore: | Popović Dusan V |
Titolo: | Repositioning Platforms in Digital Market Law |
Pubblicazione: | Cham : , : Springer, , 2024 |
©2024 | |
Edizione: | 1st ed. |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (288 pages) |
Altri autori: | KulmsRainer |
Nota di contenuto: | Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Platform Regulation: Ex Ante Tools and Strategies in the Regulatory Toolkit -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Futility of Competition vs. Regulation 'Dichotomy' in Regulating Digital Services -- 3 The Role of the Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act in European Digital Constitutionalism -- 3.1 Digital Markets Act: A Competition-Regulatory Hybrid -- 3.2 Digital Services Act: A Shift from Liability Regimes to Regulatory Compliance -- 4 Transcending the Traditional Divide Between Social and Economic, Public and Private Regulation -- 5 Risk Governance of Platforms in Digital Markets -- 5.1 Towards a Risk-Based Approach to Regulation -- 5.2 Risk-Based Approach to Designating Large Platforms as Systemically Important Regulatory Intermediaries -- 5.3 DSA: 'Hybrid' Risk-Based Approach in European Governance of Digital Technologies -- 5.4 DMA: Precautionary Approach to Duties and Risk-Related Obligations of the Gatekeepers -- 5.5 The DSA: Risk-Based Approach in Defining Asymmetric Due Diligence Obligations and the Concept of Systemic Risk -- 6 The Nature of Enforcement and Strategic Compliance Management -- 6.1 Risk-Based Compliance Enforcement Strategies: A Meta-regulatory Approach -- 6.2 The Nature of the European Digital Markets' Public Enforcement Model -- 6.3 Co-regulation, 'Private' Regulatory Tools and Strategic Compliance Management -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- The Interoperability Requirements for Digital Gatekeepers -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Digital Gatekeepers -- 3 Gatekeepers' Obligations -- 4 Vertical Interoperability -- 4.1 The Relevance of Vertical Interoperability -- 4.2 Third-Party Apps and App Stores -- 4.3 Hardware and Software Features -- 5 Horizontal Interoperability -- 5.1 Number-Independent Interpersonal Communications Services -- 5.2 Interoperability Requirements for NIICS -- 5.3 Critical Views. |
6 Conclusion -- References -- Recalibrating Territoriality in Platform End-User License Agreements -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Multi-Layered Platform Regulation of the EU -- 3 Legal Geography and Its Place Among Legal Research Methods -- 4 Signs of Territoriality in the Contractual Practices of the Analysed Internet Platforms -- 4.1 Streaming with Hosting -- 4.2 Streaming Without Hosting -- 4.3 Online Marketplaces -- 4.4 Social Media -- 5 Moving Towards "internet lex mercatoria"? -- Links to the Analysed End-User License Agreements -- Appendix -- References -- Literature -- The Digital Platforms' Sisyphean Task: Reconciling Content Moderation and Freedom of Expression -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Risk of Content Moderation Leading to General Monitoring -- 2.1 Copyright Content Moderation Under the CDSM Directive -- 2.2 'General' Content Moderation Under the DSA -- 3 Risk of Content Moderation Leading to 'Information Bubbles' -- 4 Risk of Content Demotion Leading to Censorship -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Moving Towards More Transparent Online Platforms Under the Digital Services Act -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Transparency Obligations in the DSA in General -- 3 Obliged Entities and Beneficiaries of Obligations -- 4 Primary Obligations Regarding OP's Functioning -- 5 Primary Obligations to Provide (Access to) Information/Data -- 6 Primary Obligations Regarding Online Interfaces -- 7 Meta-Obligations of Providers of Online Platforms -- 8 Conclusions -- References -- Stakeholder Engagement in EU Digital Platform Regulations: Ways Forward and Persisting Gaps -- 1 Digital Platforms and Third Parties' Interests: DMA and DSA as Corporate Digital Responsibility Norms -- 2 The Emerging European Sustainable Business Paradigm and the Rise of Sustainability-Oriented Co-regulation. | |
3 The Objectives of Digital Platform Regulations: From Market Power to Platforms' CSR -- 3.1 The Sustainable "Well-Functioning" of Digital Markets -- 4 Regulators' Engagement in the DSA and DMA -- 5 Third Interested Parties' Engagement: Contestability as Group-Based Digital Sovereignty -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Below the DMA-Threshold: Access Between Data Protection and Unfair Competition -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Platform Scenarios -- 1.2 Outline of the Paper -- 2 Regulatory Access Strategies -- 2.1 Digital Markets Act -- 2.1.1 Policy Approach -- 2.1.2 A Platform Jurisprudence Prior to the DMA -- 2.2 P2B-Regulation -- 2.2.1 Legislative Policy -- 2.2.2 Enforcement -- 2.3 The EU's New Data Act -- 2.4 Data Protection Law Aspects -- 2.5 National Access Rules: The German Law Against Restraints of Competition -- 3 Access to Data from a Fairness Perspective -- 3.1 EU Unfair Trading Law -- 3.1.1 German Unfair Trading Law I: Statutory Concepts -- 3.1.2 German Unfair Trading Law II: Case Law -- 3.2 Sector Regulation and Fair Access -- 3.2.1 Access to Automobile Manufacturing Data -- 3.2.2 E-call Rules -- 3.2.3 IVS: Systems -- 3.2.4 Energy -- 3.2.5 Agriculture -- 3.2.6 Access to Information in the US Automobile Industry: H.R. 906 -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Self-Preferencing Practices and Their Future After the DMA -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Self-Preferencing Prohibition in the DMA -- 3 The Main Interpretative Issues -- 3.1 Separate Products -- 3.2 The Notion of Ranking -- 3.3 Favoring -- 4 Enforcement and Practical Challenges: The DMA and Self-Preferencing -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- Digital Markets Act: A Promise for a Fairer Digital Environment or a Failed Experiment? -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Setting the Foundations for a Change -- 2.1 Failures of the Past as Lessons of Today -- 2.2 A 360-degrees Shift for the Regulator. | |
2.3 A Series of Dos and Don'ts -- 3 Fairness & -- Contestability in Digital Markets -- 3.1 Business User: The "Leading Actor" of the Act -- 3.2 "Killer" Acquisitions vs. the Act -- 3.3 Weak Enforcement? -- 4 Safeguarding of Privacy -- 4.1 Privacy Concerns -- 4.2 Consent: A Pseydo-Solution -- 4.3 The Duality of Data Portability -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Re-orientating Digital Platform Regulation in the US and Australia: Treading Water or Experimenting? -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Platform as a Business Model: Root Cause Analysis and Regulatory Responses -- 3 In Search of Models for Regulating Digital Platforms: US and Australia -- 3.1 USA -- 3.2 Australia -- 4 Conclusion -- References. | |
Titolo autorizzato: | Repositioning Platforms in Digital Market Law |
ISBN: | 9783031696787 |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910896181503321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
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