Slashdot Mirror


Senate Democrat Floats First Serious Proposals For Regulating Big Tech (gizmodo.com)

On Monday, Senator Mark Warner published 20 proposals on how to regulate big tech platforms. What's interesting is that none of the proposals call for breaking up the pseudo-monopolies. Instead, they aim to start a substantive debate by laying out different paths to address problems posed by the platforms. Gizmodo reports: What may be more important than the individual proposals themselves is that the document is at least trying to organize a holistic way of thinking about the issues now on the table. It breaks down the areas that need addressing into the promotion of disinformation, privacy and consumer protection, and ensuring competition in the marketplace. Just to highlight a few of the good issues on the table, the white paper blessedly brings the conversation back to privacy and data ownership -- something that seems to have been lost as the conversation has turned to content moderation. The easiest recommendation is to implement what it calls "GDPR-like" data protection legislation that would give Americans similar data rights as EU citizens gained in May. The jury is still out on the long-term consequences of those reforms, but they require greater transparency and consent for a company's terms of service, along with many more tools for keeping track of what information a company collects on you.

On the competition side of things, the proposal suggests a data-transparency bill that would give users a more granular idea of how their data is being used and how much its worth to an individual platform. One concern it addresses is that platforms expand how they monetize a person's data while the user is often unaware of how much they're actually giving up, value-wise, when they agree to hand over their data in exchange for a particular service. Another benefit would be that regulators would have a better idea of what they're evaluating in antitrust enforcement cases. The proposals relating to disinformation are a little more worrisome. A requirement that platforms "clearly and conspicuously label bots" wouldn't be so bad, but it's a daunting task and opens up the potential for false positives. Likewise, demanding networks identify a user's true identity is unrealistic, and the option of anonymity online should be protected.
Axios was first to publish the list of 20 proposals compiled by Warner's staff. Is there a proposal that resonates with you? If not, how would you regulate the Big Tech platforms?

4 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. What? by msauve · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "pseudo-monopolies."

    What? Perhaps you mean oligopoly?

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:What? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Big Tech mostly does a pretty good job at data security. Small Tech is a bigger concern, and non-Tech (like Equifax, where the CTO had a liberal arts degree) is an even bigger problem.

  2. data migration, vendor pseudo lock-in, and interop by Wycliffe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There needs to be some serious thought on how to best address data migration and pseudo vendor lock-in. Data migration is easy. I should have the ability to download all my data from facebook and upload it to google plus (or some other competitor) and vice versa.

    Pseudo vendor lockin is a bit trickier. If all your friends are on facebook then you can't move to a new platform without convincing all your friends to move too.
    I think the solution for this is to require companies to allow interoperability between sites. If I want to create a facebook clone, I should be able to allow my users to sync their account with facebook so that posts on my new site are crossposted on facebook, etc...
    There are already some marketing tools that allow this to a limited extent but it should be explicitly allowed so that people can more easily hop from platform to platform.
    Currently, trying to do a true sync of facebook with a facebook clone would be against facebook's TOS.

  3. Re:data migration, vendor pseudo lock-in, and inte by SirAstral · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Say hello to universal ID and Zero anonymity on the internet.
    I hope you are the first person in court fighting for your life after someone steals your identity and does something illegal with it.

    I hear nowadays just being accused of certain crimes destroys your future... no one will even wait until you go to trial to find out if you are innocent... you are automatically guilty... even if you eventually get a "not-guilty" verdict.

    Identity theft is about to get a lot worse after someone like you gets a hold of the problem.

    And no, data migration is NOT easy. Businesses spend ass loads of money on migrations all year round with many of them either resulting in failures or projects that did manage to finish but are only limping along.

    Just talk to a few systems admins and engineers... they will be happy to tell you how broken a lot of shit is.