This book asks a simple question: are the tech giants monopolies? In the current environment of suspicion towards the major technology companies as a result of concerns about their power and influence, it has become commonplace to talk of Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, or Netflix as the modern day version of the 19th century trusts. In turn, the tech giants are vilified for a whole range of monopoly harms towards consumers, workers and even the democratic process. In the US and the EU, antitrust, and regulatory reform is on the way. Using economics, business and management science as well legal reasoning, this book offers a new perspective on big tech. It builds a theory of "moligopoly". The theory advances that the tech giants, or at least some of them, coexist both as monopolies and oligopoly firms that compete against each other in an environment of substantial uncertainty and economic dynamism. With this, the book assesses ongoing antitrust and regulatory policy efforts. It demonstrates that it is counterproductive to pursue policies that introduce more rivalry in moligopoly markets subject to technological discontinuities. And that non-economic harms like privacy violations, fake news, or hate speech are difficult issues that belong to the realm of regulation, not antimonopoly remediation.



Autorentext

Nicolas Petit is Professor of Competition Law at the European University Institute ("EUI") in Florence. Nicolas Petit is also invited Professor at the College of Europe in Bruges and a Research Fellow at Stanford University Hoover Institution. Prior to joining the EUI, Nicolas Petit has held a public office position as a part time judge with the Belgian competition authority, and has also worked in private practice with a leading US law firm in Brussels.

Titel
Big Tech and the Digital Economy
Untertitel
The Moligopoly Scenario
EAN
9780192574725
Format
ePUB
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
09.10.2020
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.34 MB
Anzahl Seiten
304