索取经济:优步、信息和权力

Ryan Calo, Alex Rosenblat
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引用次数: 196

摘要

像优步和爱彼迎这样的共享经济公司促进了数字平台上陌生人之间的可信交易。这创造了经济和其他价值,并引发了一系列关于种族偏见、安全以及对竞争对手和工人的公平的担忧,法律学术已经开始解决这些问题。然而,文献中缺少的是对基于信息和权力不对称的共享经济的基本批评。这篇文章由一位法学教授和一位研究网约车社区的技术人种学家共同撰写,提出了这样一种批评,并指出了一条通往有意义回应的道路。长期以来,商业公司一直利用他们对消费者的了解来塑造他们的行为并实现利润最大化。然而,由于处于消费者和服务提供商之间,共享经济公司有一种独特的能力来监控和推动所有参与者——包括那些可能依赖该平台谋生的人。许多活动都隐藏在人们的视线之外,但初步证据表明,共享经济公司可能已经在利用他们对用户信息的获取和对用户体验的控制来误导、强迫或以其他方式使共享经济参与者处于不利地位。本文认为,长期以来强调信息和权力不对称的消费者保护法,相对较好地解决了共享经济中这一未被充分审视的方面。但迄今为止,监管部门的反应似乎过时且肤浅。为了有效,法律干预必须(1)反映对数字平台行为和实践的更深入理解,(2)中断共享经济公司滥用其地位的动机。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Taking Economy: Uber, Information, and Power
Sharing economy firms such as Uber and Airbnb facilitate trusted transactions between strangers on digital platforms. This creates economic and other value and raises a set of concerns around racial bias, safety, and fairness to competitors and workers that legal scholarship has begun to address. Missing from the literature, however, is a fundamental critique of the sharing economy grounded in asymmetries of information and power. This Article, coauthored by a law professor and a technology ethnographer who studies the ride-hailing community, furnishes such a critique and indicates a path toward a meaningful response. Commercial firms have long used what they know about consumers to shape their behavior and maximize profits. By virtue of sitting between consumers and providers of services, however, sharing economy firms have a unique capacity to monitor and nudge all participants — including people whose livelihood may depend on the platform. Much activity is hidden away from view, but preliminary evidence suggests that sharing economy firms may already be leveraging their access to information about users and their control over the user experience to mislead, coerce, or otherwise disadvantage sharing economy participants. This Article argues that consumer protection law, with its longtime emphasis of asymmetries of information and power, is relatively well positioned to address this under-examined aspect of the sharing economy. But the regulatory response to date seems outdated and superficial. To be effective, legal interventions must (1) reflect a deeper understanding of the acts and practices of digital platforms and (2) interrupt the incentives of sharing economy firms to abuse their position.
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