User Data as Public Resource: Implications for Social Media Regulation

IF 4.1 1区 文学 Q1 COMMUNICATION
Philip M. Napoli
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Revelations about the misuse and insecurity of user data gathered by social media platforms have renewed discussions about how best to characterize property rights in user data. At the same time, revelations about the use of social media platforms to disseminate disinformation and hate speech have prompted debates over the need for government regulation to assure that these platforms serve the public interest. These debates often hinge on whether any of the established rationales for media regulation apply to social media. This paper argues that the public resource rationale that has been utilized in traditional media regulation in the U.S. applies to social media. The public resource rationale contends that, when a media outlet utilizes a public resource – such as the broadcast spectrum, or public rights of way – the outlet must abide by certain public interest obligations that may infringe upon its First Amendment rights. This paper argues that aggregate user data can be conceptualized as a public resource that triggers the application of a public interest regulatory framework to social media sites and other digital platforms that derive their revenue from the gathering, sharing, and monetization of massive aggregations of user data.
用户数据作为公共资源:对社交媒体监管的启示
关于社交媒体平台收集的用户数据滥用和不安全的披露,重新引发了关于如何最好地描述用户数据产权的讨论。与此同时,关于利用社交媒体平台传播虚假信息和仇恨言论的披露,引发了关于政府是否需要监管以确保这些平台服务于公众利益的辩论。这些争论往往取决于媒体监管的既定原则是否适用于社交媒体。本文认为,美国传统媒体监管中使用的公共资源理论也适用于社交媒体。公共资源理论认为,当媒体机构利用公共资源(如广播频谱或公共通行权)时,该媒体机构必须遵守某些可能侵犯其第一修正案权利的公共利益义务。本文认为,聚合用户数据可以被概念化为一种公共资源,它触发了对社交媒体网站和其他数字平台的公共利益监管框架的应用,这些平台从大量用户数据的收集、共享和货币化中获得收入。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.20%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: Understanding public policy in the age of the Internet requires understanding how individuals, organizations, governments and networks behave, and what motivates them in this new environment. Technological innovation and internet-mediated interaction raise both challenges and opportunities for public policy: whether in areas that have received much work already (e.g. digital divides, digital government, and privacy) or newer areas, like regulation of data-intensive technologies and platforms, the rise of precarious labour, and regulatory responses to misinformation and hate speech. We welcome innovative research in areas where the Internet already impacts public policy, where it raises new challenges or dilemmas, or provides opportunities for policy that is smart and equitable. While we welcome perspectives from any academic discipline, we look particularly for insight that can feed into social science disciplines like political science, public administration, economics, sociology, and communication. We welcome articles that introduce methodological innovation, theoretical development, or rigorous data analysis concerning a particular question or problem of public policy.
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