RETHINKING REMEDIES FOR THE ATTENTION ECONOMY

Elvira Caterina Parisi, Francesco Parisi

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Social media networks make their services freely available to all users. Users pay for the service received with the time and attention taken by the advertisements. This chapter argues that social media platforms are a unique form of monopoly driven by “the more the merrier” effect (i.e., network effects) in users’ consumption. These monopolies exercise market power, not by charging higher prices to users but by “tying” larger amounts of advertising to their content. Traditional antitrust instruments designed to address excessive pricing and reduced output by monopolies need to be reframed to tame the attention economy problems in the social media industry. This chapter discusses five antitrust instruments grouped in three categories: structural, behavioral, and market-based remedies. Market-based solutions are the least explored in the literature, despite being the most promising instruments to lower the attention costs imposed on users, while preserving the economies of scope in production and the network effects in consumption, and possibly maintaining free access to social media, as we know it today.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationResearch in Law and Economics
PublisherEmerald Publishing
Pages75-97
Number of pages23
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 11 2023

Publication series

NameResearch in Law and Economics
Volume31
ISSN (Print)0193-5895

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elvira Caterina Parisi and Francesco Parisi.

Keywords

  • antitrust
  • antitrust remedies
  • Attention economy
  • network effects
  • social media
  • zero-price markets

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