The Imperative of Code: Labor, Regulation and Legitimacy

Shenja van der Graaf, Eran Fisher

نتاج البحث: فصل من :كتاب / تقرير / مؤتمرفصلمراجعة النظراء

ملخص

This chapter analyzes digital platforms that are marked by a transition from a user-based to market-based entity. By focusing on a migration between digital organizations, user labor practices and regulation, we investigate the trajectories of `community and monetization' emerging with the platformization of the Internet, in order to uncover a growing constitutional legitimacy gap in multi-sided business models. We therefore attempt to unravel the delicate balance between regulation and co-regulation of digital platforms. Co-regulation entails taking into account the interests of multiple actors, incorporating different incentives for (user) participation across the `value chain', which are said to increase transparency, pluralism, trust and respect for privacy. Based on legal cases surrounding Facebook, we make a case for a co-regulatory framework.
اللغة الأصليةالإنجليزيّة
عنوان منشور المضيفPolicy Implications of Virtual Work
المحررونPamela Meil, Vassil Kirov
مكان النشرCham
ناشرPalgrave Macmillan
الصفحات109-135
عدد الصفحات27
رقم المعيار الدولي للكتب (المطبوع)978-3-319-52057-5
المعرِّفات الرقمية للأشياء
حالة النشرنُشِر - 2017

سلسلة المنشورات

الاسمDynamics of Virtual Work

بصمة

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