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The social media landscape is changing. The 'public forum' is now filled with citizens selling products, promoting services, charging for subscriptions, and sometimes seeking attention in ways which may not be socially desirable. We ask: How can a space that is becoming increasingly commercialised, monetised, and is a source of income for many nevertheless be fair? Departing from this foundational question, this symposium pursues many more granular ones, each anchored in whether and how the rights of users in social media spaces can be strengthened vis-à-vis dominant platforms via social media contracts.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The social media landscape is changing. The 'public forum' is now filled with citizens selling products, promoting services, charging for subscriptions, and sometimes seeking attention in ways which may not be socially desirable. We ask: How can a space that is becoming increasingly commercialised, monetised, and is a source of income for many nevertheless be fair? Departing from this foundational question, this symposium pursues many more granular ones, each anchored in whether and how the rights of users in social media spaces can be strengthened vis-à-vis dominant platforms via social media contracts.
Autorenporträt
From blog to blog symposium to edited volume - discover our Verfassungsbooks publications at https://verfassungsblog.de/books

Catalina Goanta is an Associate Professor at Utrecht University. Her multidisciplinary research focuses on platform governance, content monetization and decentralization, and brings together methods from law and computer science.

Jacob van de Kerkhof is a PhD candidate with the Montaigne Centre at Utrecht University. His research focuses on protection of freedom of expression on social media platforms.