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Digital Platforms and the Press

New study provides an overview of the consequences of a platform-dependent press.

Platform dependence is a concept that is used to describe what happens when businesses or an entire sector become reliant on one or more digital platforms for their survival. Digital Platforms and the Press argues that we face a major risk of a platform-dependent press—a development that threatens liberal democracies across the world. As James Meese shows, the situation is occurring across the news industry, to the extent that it is difficult to imagine the production, distribution, and long-term survival of news in liberal democracies without the involvement of platforms. As governments, regulators, and citizens become increasingly concerned about platform power, Digital Platforms and the Press is the first book to highlight the long-term economic and social consequences of platform dependence for the news sector. 
 

184 pages | 7 halftones | 6.69 x 9.61 | © 2023

Media Studies


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Reviews

"This volume provides a detailed yet succinct analysis of how digital media firms such as Google, Amazon, and Meta have fundamentally influenced the modern press. . . . equal parts comprehensive and comprehensible to a variety of audiences."

Choice

"Digital Platforms and the Press deals with the relationship dynamics between digital platforms and the press industry in the context of dependency. It not only shows the economic, social, and legal consequences of platform dependence for the press sector but also introduces policy options. Meese examines digital platform dependency in the media, specifically the news industry, focusing on Google and Facebook, which dominate the online advertising and the search engine market, and are an important distribution channel for many news outlets. The book includes an expansive reference list. Thus, it provides a strong grounding in relevant debates for interested academics, media professionals, policy-makers, and students."
 

Ali Çaglar Karabiyik, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. When News went Social
2. After the Algorithm
3. Digital Advertising and Democratic Harms
4. The True Cost of News
5. Platforms as Patrons
6. Solutions for a Dependent Press
Conclusion
References
Index

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