Litcius/Paper detail

Making the digital economy “fit for Europe”

Andrea Renda

2020European Law Journal18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Over the past three decades, cyberspace has gradually become an engine of unsustainable outcomes from an economic, social and environmental perspective. The European Commission has launched several new initiatives, in the attempt to restore public control over cyberspace, remedy the distributional imbalances generated by the rise of large‐scale digital platforms, and promote Europe's digital sovereignty. The paper argues that only by embedding rules and values in “code” and preserving openness towards the rest of the world will the EU manage to achieve its desired goals. Current initiatives such as the data strategy, the AI regulation, the Digital Services Act and the European Cloud Federation appear still too sparse and uncoordinated to really deliver on Europe's ambition to lead the world in the sustainable use of technology.

Topics & Concepts

CyberspaceSovereigntyOpenness to experienceDigital economyEuropean commissionCloud computingBusinessEuropean unionPolitical scienceInternational tradeThe InternetLawComputer sciencePoliticsSocial psychologyWorld Wide WebPsychologyBlockchain Technology Applications and Security
Making the digital economy “fit for Europe” | Litcius