Paper by Jakob Ohme and LK Seiling: “The EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) establishes, for the first time, a legal right for independent researchers to access platform data in the public interest. Once designated as Very Large Online Platforms or Search Engines (VLOPSEs), services reaching 45 million EU users must provide data access to support research on “systemic risks.” Article 40 creates two pathways: Article 40(12) enables access to publicly available data beyond voluntary platform tools, while Article 40(4) allows vetted researchers to request non-public data – such as exposure logs, moderation records, and recommendation metrics – through national Digital Services Coordinators rather than platforms. Both routes are purpose-limited to studying systemic risks and, for Article 40(4), mitigation measures. Yet the DSA’s broad, non-exhaustive definition of systemic risk – covering illegal content, fundamental rights, civic discourse, public health, and user well-being – opens a wide research space spanning misinformation flows, political networks, algorithmic amplification, and platform governance, among others. Early implementation reveals challenges, including uneven compliance, uncertain technical standards, funding constraints, and limits to data sharing for replication. Nonetheless, the DSA marks a turning point: platform research is no longer dependent on corporate discretion but grounded in public-interest regulation. Researchers now play a central role in shaping evidence-based oversight of digital platforms in Europe…(More)”.
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