The Content Governance Dilemma : : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard.
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Superior document: | Information Technology and Global Governance Series |
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Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2023. ©2023. |
Year of Publication: | 2023 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Information Technology and Global Governance Series
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (153 pages) |
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Celeste, Edoardo. The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. 1st ed. Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2023. ©2023. 1 online resource (153 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Information Technology and Global Governance Series Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The Content Governance Dilemma -- 2.1 From Content Moderation to Content Governance -- 2.2 Micro and Macro Governance Tensions -- 2.3 A Normative Dilemma -- 2.3.1 Authoritarianism -- 2.3.2 Imperialism -- 2.3.3 Anomie -- 2.4 The Potential of Digital Constitutionalism -- References -- Chapter 3: The International Law of Content Governance -- 3.1 Unveiling a Myth -- 3.2 Normative Sources -- 3.2.1 Generic Standards: Platforms as Duty-Bearers? -- 3.2.2 Specific Standards: Applicable Human Rights Treaties -- 3.3 Emergent Progressive Standards -- 3.4 Regulatory Limits -- 3.4.1 Design Constraints -- 3.4.2 Structural Constraints -- 3.5 Filling a Void -- References -- Chapter 4: Shaping Standards from Below: Insights from Civil Society -- 4.1 A Constitutional 'Voice' and 'Bridge' -- 4.2 Civil Society and Internet Bills of Rights -- 4.3 Defining Substantive Rights and Obligations -- 4.3.1 Avoiding the Traps of Intermediary Liability -- 4.3.2 The Centrality of Freedom of Expression -- 4.3.3 Setting the Boundaries of Freedom of Expression -- 4.4 Limiting Platforms' Arbitrariness Through Procedural Principles -- 4.4.1 A Rule of Law Regime -- 4.4.2 Good Governance Principles -- 4.5 Embedding Human Rights Standards into Platform Socio-Technical Design -- 4.5.1 Transposing the Rule of Law -- 4.5.2 Human Rights by Design -- 4.5.3 Automated Content Moderation -- References -- Chapter 5: Platform Policies Versus Human Rights Standards -- 5.1 Human Rights Commitments as a Window Dressing Strategy? -- 5.2 Platform Policies and Human Rights Commitments -- 5.2.1 Meta -- 5.2.2 Twitter -- 5.2.3 TikTok -- 5.2.4 YouTube -- 5.3 Substance Matters! Platform Moderation Outcomes Versus Civil Society Demands. 5.4 Process Matters! Platform Moderation Processes Versus Civil Society Demands -- 5.4.1 Curbing Automated Content Moderation? -- 5.4.2 Transparency Reporting: Which Standard to Adopt? -- References -- Chapter 6: Conclusion -- References -- Annex: List of Analysed Documents -- Index. Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. Electronic books. Palladino, Nicola. Redeker, Dennis. Yilma, Kinfe. Print version: Celeste, Edoardo The Content Governance Dilemma Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2023 9783031329234 ProQuest (Firm) https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30669813 Click to View |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Celeste, Edoardo. |
spellingShingle |
Celeste, Edoardo. The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. Information Technology and Global Governance Series Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The Content Governance Dilemma -- 2.1 From Content Moderation to Content Governance -- 2.2 Micro and Macro Governance Tensions -- 2.3 A Normative Dilemma -- 2.3.1 Authoritarianism -- 2.3.2 Imperialism -- 2.3.3 Anomie -- 2.4 The Potential of Digital Constitutionalism -- References -- Chapter 3: The International Law of Content Governance -- 3.1 Unveiling a Myth -- 3.2 Normative Sources -- 3.2.1 Generic Standards: Platforms as Duty-Bearers? -- 3.2.2 Specific Standards: Applicable Human Rights Treaties -- 3.3 Emergent Progressive Standards -- 3.4 Regulatory Limits -- 3.4.1 Design Constraints -- 3.4.2 Structural Constraints -- 3.5 Filling a Void -- References -- Chapter 4: Shaping Standards from Below: Insights from Civil Society -- 4.1 A Constitutional 'Voice' and 'Bridge' -- 4.2 Civil Society and Internet Bills of Rights -- 4.3 Defining Substantive Rights and Obligations -- 4.3.1 Avoiding the Traps of Intermediary Liability -- 4.3.2 The Centrality of Freedom of Expression -- 4.3.3 Setting the Boundaries of Freedom of Expression -- 4.4 Limiting Platforms' Arbitrariness Through Procedural Principles -- 4.4.1 A Rule of Law Regime -- 4.4.2 Good Governance Principles -- 4.5 Embedding Human Rights Standards into Platform Socio-Technical Design -- 4.5.1 Transposing the Rule of Law -- 4.5.2 Human Rights by Design -- 4.5.3 Automated Content Moderation -- References -- Chapter 5: Platform Policies Versus Human Rights Standards -- 5.1 Human Rights Commitments as a Window Dressing Strategy? -- 5.2 Platform Policies and Human Rights Commitments -- 5.2.1 Meta -- 5.2.2 Twitter -- 5.2.3 TikTok -- 5.2.4 YouTube -- 5.3 Substance Matters! Platform Moderation Outcomes Versus Civil Society Demands. 5.4 Process Matters! Platform Moderation Processes Versus Civil Society Demands -- 5.4.1 Curbing Automated Content Moderation? -- 5.4.2 Transparency Reporting: Which Standard to Adopt? -- References -- Chapter 6: Conclusion -- References -- Annex: List of Analysed Documents -- Index. |
author_facet |
Celeste, Edoardo. Palladino, Nicola. Redeker, Dennis. Yilma, Kinfe. |
author_variant |
e c ec |
author2 |
Palladino, Nicola. Redeker, Dennis. Yilma, Kinfe. |
author2_variant |
n p np d r dr k y ky |
author2_role |
TeilnehmendeR TeilnehmendeR TeilnehmendeR |
author_sort |
Celeste, Edoardo. |
title |
The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_sub |
Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_full |
The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_fullStr |
The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_auth |
The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
title_new |
The Content Governance Dilemma : |
title_sort |
the content governance dilemma : digital constitutionalism, social media and the search for a global standard. |
series |
Information Technology and Global Governance Series |
series2 |
Information Technology and Global Governance Series |
publisher |
Springer International Publishing AG, |
publishDate |
2023 |
physical |
1 online resource (153 pages) |
edition |
1st ed. |
contents |
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The Content Governance Dilemma -- 2.1 From Content Moderation to Content Governance -- 2.2 Micro and Macro Governance Tensions -- 2.3 A Normative Dilemma -- 2.3.1 Authoritarianism -- 2.3.2 Imperialism -- 2.3.3 Anomie -- 2.4 The Potential of Digital Constitutionalism -- References -- Chapter 3: The International Law of Content Governance -- 3.1 Unveiling a Myth -- 3.2 Normative Sources -- 3.2.1 Generic Standards: Platforms as Duty-Bearers? -- 3.2.2 Specific Standards: Applicable Human Rights Treaties -- 3.3 Emergent Progressive Standards -- 3.4 Regulatory Limits -- 3.4.1 Design Constraints -- 3.4.2 Structural Constraints -- 3.5 Filling a Void -- References -- Chapter 4: Shaping Standards from Below: Insights from Civil Society -- 4.1 A Constitutional 'Voice' and 'Bridge' -- 4.2 Civil Society and Internet Bills of Rights -- 4.3 Defining Substantive Rights and Obligations -- 4.3.1 Avoiding the Traps of Intermediary Liability -- 4.3.2 The Centrality of Freedom of Expression -- 4.3.3 Setting the Boundaries of Freedom of Expression -- 4.4 Limiting Platforms' Arbitrariness Through Procedural Principles -- 4.4.1 A Rule of Law Regime -- 4.4.2 Good Governance Principles -- 4.5 Embedding Human Rights Standards into Platform Socio-Technical Design -- 4.5.1 Transposing the Rule of Law -- 4.5.2 Human Rights by Design -- 4.5.3 Automated Content Moderation -- References -- Chapter 5: Platform Policies Versus Human Rights Standards -- 5.1 Human Rights Commitments as a Window Dressing Strategy? -- 5.2 Platform Policies and Human Rights Commitments -- 5.2.1 Meta -- 5.2.2 Twitter -- 5.2.3 TikTok -- 5.2.4 YouTube -- 5.3 Substance Matters! Platform Moderation Outcomes Versus Civil Society Demands. 5.4 Process Matters! Platform Moderation Processes Versus Civil Society Demands -- 5.4.1 Curbing Automated Content Moderation? -- 5.4.2 Transparency Reporting: Which Standard to Adopt? -- References -- Chapter 6: Conclusion -- References -- Annex: List of Analysed Documents -- Index. |
isbn |
9783031329241 9783031329234 |
callnumber-first |
J - Political Science |
callnumber-subject |
JF - Public Administration |
callnumber-label |
JF1525 |
callnumber-sort |
JF 41525 P6 |
genre |
Electronic books. |
genre_facet |
Electronic books. |
url |
https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30669813 |
illustrated |
Not Illustrated |
dewey-hundreds |
300 - Social sciences |
dewey-tens |
380 - Commerce, communications & transportation |
dewey-ones |
384 - Communications; telecommunication |
dewey-full |
384.334 |
dewey-sort |
3384.334 |
dewey-raw |
384.334 |
dewey-search |
384.334 |
oclc_num |
1396696001 |
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Information Technology and Global Governance Series |
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The Content Governance Dilemma : Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard. |
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