When Curation Becomes Creation: Algorithms, Microcontent, and the Vanishing Distinction between Platforms and Creators
Liu Leqi, Dylan Hadfield-Menell, Zachary C. Lipton

TL;DR
This paper argues that the traditional distinction between platforms and creators is outdated due to platforms increasingly creating derivative content, necessitating new regulatory frameworks that recognize this continuum.
Contribution
It challenges the platform-creator dichotomy, highlighting the need for regulatory adaptation to the modern social media landscape where platforms act as creators.
Findings
Platforms curate and create derivative media products.
Current regulations favor platforms with broad discretion and limited liability.
A new categorization system for platform activities is needed.
Abstract
Ever since social activity on the Internet began migrating from the wilds of the open web to the walled gardens erected by so-called platforms, debates have raged about the responsibilities that these platforms ought to bear. And yet, despite intense scrutiny from the news media and grassroots movements of outraged users, platforms continue to operate, from a legal standpoint, on the friendliest terms. Under the current regulatory framework, platforms simultaneously benefit from: (1) broad discretion to organize (and censor) content however they choose; (2) powerful algorithms for curating a practically limitless supply of user-posted microcontent according to whatever ends they wish; and (3) absolution from the sorts of liability born by creators of the underlying content. In this paper, we contest the very validity of the platform-creator distinction, arguing that it is ill-adapted to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaw, AI, and Intellectual Property · Ethics and Social Impacts of AI · Hate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection
