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Regulating Digital Industries is the first book to address the tech backlash within a coherent policy framework. It treats competition, privacy and free speech as objectives that must be pursued in a coordinated fashion by a dedicated industry regulator. It contains detailed discussions of current policy controversies involving social media companies, search engines, electronic commerce platforms and mobile apps. It argues for new laws and regulations to promote competition, privacy and free speech in tech and outlines the structure and powers of a regulatory agency able to develop, implement and enforce digital rules for the twenty-first century.
Deeply informed by the history of regulation and antitrust in the United States, it brings to bear insights from the breakup of AT&T and the Microsoft case and from broadcasting and financial services regulation to enrich the discussion of remedies to the failure of tech competition, the massive invasion of privacy by digital firms and the information disorder perpetuated by social media platforms. It offers a comprehensive summary of regulatory reform efforts in the United States and abroad and shows how accomplishing the goals of these reform efforts requires the establishment of a single digital agency with jurisdiction to reconcile and balance the complementary and conflicting goals of promoting competition, protecting privacy, and preserving free speech in digital industries.
It discusses in detail how a digital regulatory agency would be structured and the powers it would need to have. It confronts head on some of the challenges in establishing a strong digital regulator including the First Amendment roadblock that limits government authority over digital speech and the judicial opposition to the expansion of the administrative state. It is essential reading for policymakers, public interest advocates, industry representatives, academic researchers and the general public interested in a coherent policy approach to today’s tech industry discontents.
Published | 07 Nov 2023 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 498 |
ISBN | 9780815739814 |
Imprint | Brookings Institution Press |
Illustrations | 1 b/w illustratio |
Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Few people have thought as deeply about how to effectively regulate digital technologies as Professor MacCarthy. This timely book is an urgent and well-argued reminder that we do not have to accept a status quo where a few wildly powerful tech companies continue to operate with virtually no regulation -- hurting competition, undermining democracy, and addicting a generation of America’s kids. Professor MacCarthy sheds light on the 40-year campaign to discredit government regulation, which has left the American people unprotected against the coming wave of digital disruption -- from machine-learning algorithms to generative artificial intelligence. His book is an urgent call to learn from our history and empower an expert regulator for the tech sector, no different than how we oversaw the railroad, aviation, or broadcast television sectors in past eras. For the sake of our children and democracy, we would do well to answer Professor MacCarthy's call.
Senator Michael Bennet
With a deep grasp of history and a sharp policy acumen, Mark MacCarthy provides readers with a detailed and alarming portrait of the ever-expanding threats from Big Tech. As MacCarthy illustrates, the government’s laissez-faire approach to technology regulation has decisively failed, leaving us with entrenched monopolies, a vast corporate surveillance apparatus, and a youth mental health crisis. Regulating Digital Industries is required reading for students, policymakers, and anyone who cares about the future of our democracy.
Senator Ed Markey, (D – Massachusetts)
Mark MacCarthy makes a strong case for addressing the challenges arising from big tech using the regulatory tools we've developed for other industries. An important contribution to the debate of the decade.
Tim Wu, professor, Columbia Law School; author, The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires and The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside Our Heads
In this book, Mark MacCarthy takes on the most challenging problem in today's digital world -- how can the public enjoy the enormous benefits of digital platforms without ceding to these companies control of our digital lives? With scholarly precision, MacCarthy shows that decades of reliance on "self-regulation" and existing consumer protection laws have created a world where a handful of mammoth digital platforms exercise outsized control over how we do everything from look for work, shop for goods and services, and receive our daily news that shapes our opinions and our democracy. Fortunately, MacCarthy presents a workable solution to give us back control of our digital lives -- creating a new federal agency with both the expertise and the regulatory power to restore our online autonomy and protect our democratic institutions from the current flood of disinformation and harassment. This approach has worked before and can work again -- if policymakers find the political will to follow the proposals in this book and make it happen.
Harold Feld, Senior Vice President, Public Knowledge
Mark MacCarthy astutely points out the key ways in which current U.S. law fails to address the enormous economic and social harms caused by dominant digital platforms and then provides a cogent and comprehensive solution: a public oversight body up to the task of reining in digital market abuses. By reviving the time-tested sector regulatory model updated to reflect today's market realities, MacCarthy delivers a challenge for lawmakers that must be addressed to preserve our democratic institutions and competitive marketplace principles.
Gene Kimmelman, Senior Research Fellow, Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government Harvard Kennedy School, and Senior Policy Fellow Yale's Tobin Economic Policy Center, former Deputy Associate Attorney General Department of Justice
Mark MacCarthy’s decades of experience in government, the private sector, and academia is reflected in a work of great importance, certain to influence the ongoing policy debates surrounding the incalculable benefits and the substantial costs attributable to the digital sector. Dr. MacCarthy’s proposed solution, a dedicated digital regulatory agency with sufficient legal authority and relevant expertise, is designed to protect the benefits while minimizing the costs.
Regulating Digital Industries describes the digital business models and the reasons that today’s legal and regulatory institutions have not been successful in addressing market power, privacy protection, and “information disorder” issues that have emerged from those business models. By going beyond admiring the problems and offering a practical, if long term, solution, Dr. MacCarthy has made a material contribution to one of the most important policy debates of our time.
Phil Verveer, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Communications and Information Policy and Senior Counsellor to the Chairman of the FCC, first lead counsel on United States v. AT&T
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