[article] Titre : | Platforms of power | Type de document : | document électronique | Auteurs : | Robin Mansell, Auteur | Année de publication : | 2015 | Article en page(s) : | p.20-24 | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUE
| Tags : | TIC internet régulation neutralité du net concurrence aspect économique législation | Index. décimale : | 004.678 Internet | Note de contenu : | "The rise of content and media intermediaries such as Google and Facebook as digital gatekeepers raises major policy and regulation concerns, writes Robin Mansell" (chapeau de l'article)
"Media policy has always been concerned with the exercise of media power. Regulatory frameworks are designed to ensure that, whatever power the media may have, it is exercised in a way that aligns with citizen and consumer interests. When the exercise of media power seems likely to reduce media plurality, is there a need for regulatory intervention? If yes, what evidence base is needed? In an age when digital intermediaries are sitting at the very core of a complex media ecology, how can policymakers ensure that media pluralism is maximised, albeit in line with other competing policy goals? (...)" | in Intermedia > 43/1 (March 2015) . - p.20-24
[article] Platforms of power [document électronique] / Robin Mansell, Auteur . - 2015 . - p.20-24. Langues : Anglais in Intermedia > 43/1 (March 2015) . - p.20-24 Catégories : | MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUE
| Tags : | TIC internet régulation neutralité du net concurrence aspect économique législation | Index. décimale : | 004.678 Internet | Note de contenu : | "The rise of content and media intermediaries such as Google and Facebook as digital gatekeepers raises major policy and regulation concerns, writes Robin Mansell" (chapeau de l'article)
"Media policy has always been concerned with the exercise of media power. Regulatory frameworks are designed to ensure that, whatever power the media may have, it is exercised in a way that aligns with citizen and consumer interests. When the exercise of media power seems likely to reduce media plurality, is there a need for regulatory intervention? If yes, what evidence base is needed? In an age when digital intermediaries are sitting at the very core of a complex media ecology, how can policymakers ensure that media pluralism is maximised, albeit in line with other competing policy goals? (...)" |
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