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Radical Reforms: Bringing Fairness to Social Media Contracts

  • Catalina Goanta(editor)
  • Marlene Straub (editor)
  • Jacob van de Kerkhof(editor)
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Metadata
TitleRadical Reforms
SubtitleBringing Fairness to Social Media Contracts
ContributorCatalina Goanta(editor)
Marlene Straub (editor)
Jacob van de Kerkhof(editor)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.17176/20230717-124837-0
Landing pagehttps://intrechtdok.de/receive/mir_mods_00015835
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
PublisherVerfassungsblog
Publication placeBerlin
Published on2025-09-10
ISBN978-3-7584-7625-9 (PDF)
Long abstract

The social media landscape is changing. The 'public forum' is now filled with citizens selling products, promoting services, charging for subscriptions, and sometimes seeking attention in ways which may not be socially desirable. We ask: How can a space that is becoming increasingly commercialised, monetised, and is a source of income for many nevertheless be fair? Departing from this foundational question, this symposium pursues many more granular ones, each anchored in whether and how the rights of users in social media spaces can be strengthened vis-à-vis dominant platforms via social media contracts.

Print length210 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
THEMA
  • LBBR
  • LAP
Keywords
  • Social Media <http://d-nb.info/gnd/4639271-3>
Contents

Foreword

(pp. 5–18)
  • Catalina Goanta
  • Marlene Straub
  • Jacob van de Kerkhof

The Invisible Contract: Rethinking the Principle of Informality on Social Media Platforms

(pp. 19–32)
  • Laura Aade

Personalised Law and Social Media

(pp. 33–44)
  • Omri Ben-Shahar

The Magic Bullet That Isn’t! The Limited Efficacy of Article 14 DSA in Safeguarding Copyright Exceptions to Quotation and Parody on Social Media Platforms

(pp. 45–58)
  • Sunimal Mendis

From Contract Law to Online Speech Governance

(pp. 59–74)
  • Mateusz Grochowski

Digesting the (Not So) Free Lunches of Social Media: “Dark Patterns” and Party Autonomy

(pp. 75–92)
  • Hans Christoph Grigoleit

The Contractual Rights and Obligations of Prosumers on Social Media Platforms: Recognizing Use Value

(pp. 93–108)
  • Vanessa Mak

A Non-Binary Approach to Platform-to-Business Transactions

(pp. 109–126)
  • Niva Elkin-Koren
  • Ohad Somech
  • Maayan Perel

Data After Life: The Protection of Users’ Development of their Digital Identity

(pp. 127–140)
  • Chantal Mak

Pay to Play: Social Media Meets the Subscription Economy

(pp. 141–160)
  • Christoph Busch

The Shape of Personalisation to Come: Whether Done in the Interest of Consumers or Traders, Personalisation Requires a (Platform) Governance Perspective

(pp. 161–180)
  • Johanna Laux

Monetising Harmful Content on Social Media

(pp. 181–194)
  • Giovanni De Gregorio

Rethinking the Regulation of Financial Influencers

(pp. 195–210)
  • Felix Pflücke
Locations
Landing PageFull text URLPlatform
PDFhttps://verfassungsblog.de/buecher/radical-reforms-bringing-fairness-to-social-media-contractsLanding pagehttps://verfassungsblog.de/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Goanta-et-al_Radical-Reforms.pdfFull text URLPublisher Website
Contributors

Catalina Goanta

(editor)
Maastricht University
University of Groningen
Utrecht University
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1044-9800

Marlene Straub

(editor)
University of Amsterdam

Jacob van de Kerkhof

(editor)
Utrecht University
https://orcid.org/0009-0007-6797-559X

UK registered social enterprise and Community Interest Company (CIC).

Company registration 14549556

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