Tech Policy Press - Why Europe’s Resistance to Big Tech Matters for the Future of Democracy

CJL director Courtney Radsch argues that amid the failure to regulate its own tech firms, the U.S. must not be allowed to undermine European efforts to regain sovereignty over their information systems and resist domination by Big Tech.

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Over the past several years, Europe has enacted a set of laws, regulations and antitrust remedies intended to bolster democratic oversight and accountability, compliance and competition, and ultimately the health of its information ecosystems by redressing the outsized power of very large online platforms (VLOPs). Over the past year, the United States government and dominant tech firms launched a campaign to undermine digital legislation in Europe, equating regulation with censorship to protect American dominance while undermining the democratic sovereignty of its allies.

This campaign targets the Digital Services Act (DSA) and Digital Markets Act (DMA) as well as other laws that apply to the very largest digital platforms. The administration has inaccurately portrayed these laws as "foreign censorship" and "taxes on American firms.” These attacks appear designed to achieve three main objectives:

  1. To protect US tech platforms from public oversight and accountability;

  2. To weaken European sovereignty; and

  3. To clear the way for extremist parties and those who directly oppose liberal democracy

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