Digital Empires: The Global Battle to Regulate Digital Technology
- Virtual
- 12PM 鈥 1PM EDT
The idealized vision of the Internet is a seamless global commons governed by technocratic consensus. In reality, the network has become increasingly fragmented in recent years, especially as it emerges as an arena for geopolitical contestation. In her recent book, , Anu Bradford explores the nature鈥攁nd possible consequences鈥攐f this fragmentation. In particular, her book takes a deep dive into three competing models of digital governance: the EU鈥檚 鈥渞ights-driven鈥 model, the US鈥檚 鈥渕arket-driven鈥 model, and China鈥檚 鈥渟tate-driven鈥 model.
Join Planetary Politics and Columbia University鈥檚 European Legal Studies Center as we discuss these models with Anu Bradford, and consider what they mean for the Internet, and more generally global politics and the balance of power in the twenty-first century. Is the Internet irretrievably fragmented into the much-dreaded Splinternet? What does this mean for global flows of data, as well as for freedom of expression, human rights, and democracy? Is there a way to balance growing calls for digital sovereignty with the desire to maintain a global network? And finally, are there other models鈥攑erhaps not discussed in the book鈥攖hat may also be emerging, and that may also come to define the global digital ecosystem?
SPEAKER:
, Henry L. Moses Professor of Law and International Organization, Columbia Law School
MODERATOR:
Akash Kapur, Senior Fellow, Planetary Politics, 国产视频