Thursday, September 27, 2018

Tech Firms Are Not Soverigns

This is a very important issue: Andrew Keane Woods writing at Lawfare:
Technology firms are extraordinarily powerful. They control vast sums of money. They serve unprecedentedly large customer bases—in some instances, larger customer bases than any nation on earth (Facebook now has over 2 billion users). Tech firms implement rules on their platforms in a law-like manner, often in ways that are as consequential or more than any law on the books, and they regularly resist state regulatory efforts. This has led a number of people to suggest that tech firms are sovereigns (and, often, sovereign in ways that large firms before them were not).

I disagree, and this essay explains why. Even if we can agree that tech firms play all sorts of state-like functions, it is not helpful to think of them as sovereigns. This is neither a descriptively accurate nor a normatively desirable way to approach the central regulatory challenge of the global internet. It frames the key regulatory challenge—and the central power struggle—as between states and tech firms, when in fact it is a struggle between states.

The question is not can states pursue their goals vis-à-vis global tech firms, but rather: which states and how? This essay does not set out to address these questions—for a start at that, see my article, “Litigating Data Sovereignty,” forthcoming in the Yale Law Journal. Rather, this short essay provides reasons to be skeptical of claims that tech firms are sovereigns—either on their own or as compared to other large firms like Walmart or Coca-Cola.

Comments are very welcome.
Cf. See this post, Will Trumpism Usher in the Kind of Dystopian Future Depicted in Some Science Fiction?, which presents Abbe Mowshowitz's concept of virtual feudalism.

1 comment:

  1. virtual feudalism one of the articles linked in the paper sets out a vision of the sovereign tech firm as a "virtual Switzerland."

    Feudalism has been the subject of debate in history, the term is understood to be highly problematic.

    Mark bloch's suggestion was that it should not prove an issue as long as you clearly define what it is you are talking about (no consensus exists in regard to the term).

    The risk, the easy idea to easily grasped, pseudo analysis and sound bite.

    Feudalism is most often used to convey the idea of something very bad that has little or no relationship with medieval social or political organization. "I am going to get medieval on you're ass." As the line from the film goes.

    Coming from the land of Brexit I am keenly aware of the of the relationship of Sovereignty with the political deployment of the soundbite.

    Its a legal term so its range of meanings here are no less complex but clearly defined.

    Definition of terms and awareness of the problems surrounding them as the are deployed in the wild often seems to be overlooked.


    ReplyDelete