Paper by Hani Safadi and Richard Thomas Watson: “The rise of digital platforms creates knowledge monopolies that threaten innovation. Their power derives from the imposition of data obligations and persistent coupling on platform participation and their usurpation of the rights to data created by other participants to facilitate information asymmetries. Knowledge monopolies can use machine learning to develop competitive insights unavailable to every other platform participant. This information asymmetry stifles innovation, stokes the growth of the monopoly, and reinforces its ascendency. National or regional governance structures, such as laws and regulatory authorities, constrain economic monopolies deemed not in the public interest. We argue the need for legislation and an associated regulatory mechanism to curtail coercive data obligations, control, eliminate data rights exploitation, and prevent mergers and acquisitions that could create or extend knowledge monopolies…(More)”.
How to contribute:
Did you come across – or create – a compelling project/report/book/app at the leading edge of innovation in governance?
Share it with us at info@thelivinglib.org so that we can add it to the Collection!
About the Curator
Get the latest news right in you inbox
Subscribe to curated findings and actionable knowledge from The Living Library, delivered to your inbox every Friday
Related articles
DATA, privacy
Digital Identity Wallets
Posted in December 17, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst
artificial intelligence, DATA
How Congress Is Wiring Its Data for the AI Era
Posted in December 15, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst
DATA
Is this the end of Business-to-Government (B2G) sharing? How the European Commission’s Digital Omnibus Confines B2G Data Sharing to a ‘Last Resort’ Option
Posted in December 10, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst