Big Tech, Algorithmic Power, and Democratic Control

Publication date

2024-10-01

Authors

Aytac, UgurISNI 0000000493447863

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This article argues that instituting Citizen Boards of Governance (CBGs) is the optimal strategy to democratically contain Big Tech’s algorithmic powers in the digital public sphere. CBGs are bodies of randomly selected citizens that are authorized to govern the algorithmic infrastructure of Big Tech platforms. The main advantage of CBGs is to tackle the concentrated powers of private tech corporations without giving too much power to governments. I show why this is a better approach than ordinary state regulation or relying on market mechanisms. My proposal follows from the critique of Big Tech’s concentrated powers and explains how this justifies democratizing algorithms in the digital public sphere. My approach thus speaks to a core commitment in democratic theory: enhancing the autonomy of the public sphere from the centers of powers in modern societies, be it corporations or governments.

Keywords

algorithms, big tech, corporate power, democratic innovations, digital public sphere, Taverne, Sociology and Political Science

Citation

Aytac, U 2024, 'Big Tech, Algorithmic Power, and Democratic Control', Journal of Politics, vol. 86, no. 4, pp. 1431-1445. https://doi.org/10.1086/729938