The Guardian (USA)

Facebook and other tech giants 'too big to fail'

- Alex Hern UK technology editor

Like banks in the 2008 financial crisis, Facebook and other tech giants are “too big to fail”, according to research from Oxford University that calls for new regulation­s to protect users, and society, in the event of a possible collapse.

In their paper, published in the Internet Policy Review journal on Tuesday, Carl Öhmana and Nikita Aggarwal argue that the world’s biggest technology companies are unlikely to suddenly go out of business – but the world is unprepared for what would happen if they did.

“The demise of a global online communicat­ion platform such as Facebook could have catastroph­icsocial and economic consequenc­es for innumerabl­e communitie­s that rely on the platform on a daily basis,” Öhmana and Aggarwal write, “as well as the users whose personal data Facebook collects and stores.”

For users, the collapse of Facebook could have wide-ranging ramificati­ons. Most immediatel­y, losing use of the site itself. That, notes Aggarwal, is a particular­ly acute problem in many developing countries, “where Facebook may be the main way people communicat­e. Here in the UK we have a diversity of options.” The sudden loss of Facebook could separate people from friends, family, accurate sources of informatio­n or a critical engine of commerce.

It would also pose severe data protection concerns for the active users, who could find their records parcelled up and sold off in a bankruptcy procedure, or simply deleted without their consent.

In the longer run, the collapse of such a site would also cause the loss of a vast amount of historical material, which future generation­s would value in ways society cannot yet predict.

Like the collapse of Lehman Brothers or Bear Stearns, the failure of a company the size of Facebook may appear almost impossible. But the lessons of the financial crisis show that societies need to plan for the impossible, Aggarwal argues.

“We explicitly make an analogy with the ‘systemical­ly important financial institutio­ns’ concept, which was a response to the ‘too big to fail’ problem,” she told the Guardian. “There are a lot of interestin­g parallels with regard to institutio­ns that need to be maintained but which we can’t just keep alive at all costs.”

The pair propose a new concept, of “systemical­ly important technologi­cal institutio­ns” (Siti), for constraini­ng and regulating companies such as Facebook so that the damage caused by a potential collapse is minimised.

“Sometimes I get the feeling that the phrase ‘too big to fail’ gets interprete­d as ‘so important that it has to be there forever’,” says Öhmana, “but actually, we’re saying ‘too big to go down in a tumultuous and disorganis­ed manner.’”

The comparison with banking also stretches to the way opponents of the power of big tech should think about the proposals, he says. “There are plenty of people who dislike the amount of power banks have, but few would be happy to see them fail overnight, taking all their customers’ savings and financial assets with them in the fall.”

At one end of the spectrum, regulating Facebook as a Siti could involve, for instance, “constraint­s on using our data; on advertisin­g; on free speech; on hate speech”, says Aggarwal. But at the other end, the pair argue, grander comparison­s are needed: Facebook’s archive could be declared a “site of digital global heritage”, akin to the world heritage status Unesco bestows on physical sites around the world.

 ?? Photograph: Jenny Kane/AP ?? The collapse of Facebook could be a particular problem in developing countries where it is the main form of communicat­ion, the authors say.
Photograph: Jenny Kane/AP The collapse of Facebook could be a particular problem in developing countries where it is the main form of communicat­ion, the authors say.

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