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Auteur Alexandre DE STREEL |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur



Rapport
Article de périodique
Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur ; Jorge PADILLA, Auteur ; Jacques CREMER, Auteur |Rapport
Jan KRAMER, Auteur ; Pierre SENELLART, Auteur ; Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur | Bruxelles [Belgique] : CERRE | 2020Rapport
Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur ; Elise DEFREYNE, Auteur ; Hervé JACQUEMIN, Auteur ; Michèle LEDGER, Auteur ; Alejandra MICHEL, Auteur | Luxembourg : European Parliament | 2020Rapport
Zorana ROSIC, Auteur ; Michael LOGNOUL, Auteur ; Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur ; Christian HOCEPIED, Auteur | Bruxelles : European Parliament | 2019PDF en libre accès
This study reviews all the rules adopted during the 8th Parliamentary legislature (2014-2019) to strengthen the Digital Single Market. On that basis, the report analyses the rights and obligations as well as the institutions and procedures created or improved in the main policy fields of the Digital Single Market (e-commerce and online platforms, e-government, data and AI, cybersecurity, consumer protection and electronic communications networks and services). Finally, the report identifies remaining gaps and possible actions for the forthcoming Parliament’s legislature.
This document has been prepared for the IMCO Committee at the request of the Policy Department A of the European Parliament.Rapport
PDF en accès libre
Abstract
With the growing economic and societal importance of online platforms, the question of their liability for illegal content or products they host becomes more important. Based on an analysis of platform's incentives, we address the appropriate liability rule for hosting service providers and derive policy recommendations for an efficient liability regime in the European Union. Online hosting platforms may take monitoring efforts on their own initiative that are suboptimal due to the presence of externalities and asymmetric information problems, warranting some form of liability rules. However, for more fundamental reasons of free speech and preventing censorship, policy makers may want to be cautious in entrusting – and burdening – private parties which such an extensive 'policing" role. Additionally, higher monitoring requirements may disproportionally burden small entrants. As we argue, since several actors participate to the diffusion of illegal material online, the responsibility of a safe Internet should be shared among all these actors. Concrete regulatory improvements may encourage online hosting platforms to do their part in monitoring proactively and diligently, such as affirming a good Samaritan clause.Rapport
Non publié
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
PDF en accès libreMonographie source
Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur ; Miriam BUITEN, Auteur ; Martin PEITZ, Auteur | Bruxelles [Belgique] : CERRE | 2018Article de monographie
Rapport
Jan KRAMER, Auteur ; Daniel SCHNURR, Auteur ; Alexandre DE STREEL, Auteur | Bruxelles [Belgique] : CERRE | 2017