interoperability as a standard- based ict competition remedy dr ian brown (oxford) and prof. dr...
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Interoperability as a Standard-based ICT Competition Remedy
Dr Ian Brown (Oxford) and Prof. Dr Chris Marsden (Sussex)IEEE SIIT 24 September 2013
Standards-based interoperability frameworkWe assess regulatory intervention
◦according to the code solutions used. Standards-based solutions involve
both ◦competition analysis and ◦ interoperability requirements ◦ in strategic communications sectors.
We conclude that such standards frameworks are urgently needed ◦ to enable citizens to make most effective
use of the opportunities offered by ICTs
We analyse the regulatory shaping of “code” standards Technological environment of Internet comprising hardware, software and their
interactions, notably in the protocols and standards
used to achieve interoperabilityto achieve more economically efficient
and socially just regulation.Acknowledging that “openness” in
standards is controversial ◦Kretchmer (2008) Open Standards
Requirements
History of competition policy for open technology standards Long predates the Internet (Kahin and Abbate
1995) Governments see success of open standards as
◦ solutions for the well-known entrenchment of ◦ dominant Internet commercial actors using network
effects ◦ (Pitofsky 1998; Lemley and McGowan 1998).
Evidence of extensive network effects and innovation that can rapidly tip markets
◦ Bar/Borrus/Steinberg 1995; Cowie/Marsden 1999 focussed policymakers’ attention on interoperability solution to emerging competition & innovation
problems ◦ (EC 1997, De Nardis ed. 2011, van Schewick 2011)
Many de facto standards created outside formal SSOsProducers and consumers coalesce
around a dominant product or service, ◦ E.g. Windows OS, Intel microproc architecture
Problems of interoperability and refusal to licence by the de facto standards setters, ◦ heavily enmeshed and interdependent
environment of computer software and hardware.
De facto standards setters leverage dominance into other areas (Coates 2011)
Regulatory constraints created Internet innovation in 1980-90sCannon (2003): fundamental regulation imposed on U.S. telecoms firms in 1980s
◦open network architecture (ONA) ◦1985 Computer III inquiry
U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC). (Computer II and III inquiries refer to investigations by
the FCC into the regulation of data transfer and the conditions necessary to achieve an increasingly competitive market for that data.)
European equivalent amounted to ◦ interoperability plus ◦physical interconnection between networks
(Coates 2011)
Microsoft lessons?Microsoft crushed Netscape
◦moment of “Schumpeterian emergency” (Bresnahan, Greenstein, and Hendersen
2011)
Mehra 2011: innovative upstarts outwit clumsier behemoths?◦Android/Apple v. Windows Mobile
Interoperability was solution imposed – or refutedMicrosoft competition litigation,
◦ beginning with U.S. antitrust investigation in 1991 prior to the dawn of mass Internet adoption,
enforced interoperability and application programming interface (API) disclosure,
Intel settling similar investigation into interoperability and anticompetitive practices.
Interoperability adapted by the complainants in ◦ Google and Facebook investigations EC 2010
(IP/10/1624) ◦ Apple’s iTunes price discrimination settlement EC in
2007–2008 (IP/08/22) ◦ preliminary antitrust investigation into Apple’s App
Store policies (IP/10/1175).
Law and Code; Code and Law
Interoperability is not a panacea or magic bullet in all cases◦Understanding protocols/standards ◦as well as legal regulation,
leads to a better understanding of how ◦regulation can shape “better” standards ◦support interoperability and competition◦Where required? ◦Lessig 1999/2006, Zittrain 2008
Regulating CodeGood Governance and Better Regulation in the Information Age (MIT Press)@IanBrownOII@ChrisTMarsden#RegulatingCode
Empirical investigationFive case studies and one ‘prior art’
(encryption, anonymity, security)◦ Multi-year empirical investigation ◦ Builds on various EC/other studies including
‘Self-regulation.info’ (2001-4), ‘Co-regulation’ (2006-8), ‘Towards a Future Internet’ (2008-10), ‘Privacy Value Networks’ (2008-11), ‘Network neutrality’ (2007-10) ‘Internet science’ (2012-15)
Reassesses prior art in view of ‘hard cases’◦ Topics with no organised regulation/self-
regulation◦ Due to lack of consensus over solutions◦ Clash between market outcomes and human
rights
Prosumers not super-usersWeb 2.0 and related tools make for
active users, not passive consumersUS administrative & academic
arguments ◦self-regulation may work for geeks, ◦but what about the other 99%?
European regulatory space ◦more fertile ground to explore
prosumerism ◦as both a market-based and ◦citizen-oriented regulatory tool
Government and market failure
Industry capture of regulators & legislators
Incumbents introduce new barriers to entry
Continued exclusion of wider civil society ◦ tenuous chain of accountability of participants ◦ to voters, shareholders and NGO stakeholders. ◦effectiveness, accountability and legitimacy of
these groups in representing the public interest?
EC Responses to Problems Better open standards procurement? Decision No 922/2009/EC on interoperability solutions
for European public administrations (ISA) Better multistakeholder standard setting? Multi Stakeholder Platform
◦ Commission Decision OJ C 349, 30.11.2011, p. 4 Recognised in EC Regulation (2013) on European
standardisation, ◦ amending Council Directives 89/686/EEC and 93/15/EEC
and Directives 94/9/EC, 94/25/EC, 95/16/EC, 97/23/EC, 98/34/EC, 2004/22/EC, 2007/23/EC, 2009/23/EC and 2009/105/EC and repealing Decision 87/95/EEC and Decision No 1673/2006/EC
Reinforces ICT standardisation efforts from Framework Directive 2002/21/EC
Towards interoperability as prosumer law
Solution for prosumers & competition◦ enhance competitive production of public goods◦ innovation, public safety, and fundamental rights
Key aspects:◦ Communications not competition policy◦ Ex ante intervention (ex post supplements)◦ Interoperability (incl. FRAND)◦ Fair and reasonable defined by govt procurement
Not detailed rate of return regulation Note that IT software leaders make supra-normal
returns
◦ Detailed software interoperability, not the general description offered by Gasser/Palfrey
2012 Specifics in Gasser (2007)
What regulation teaches about code
Ex ante + ex post interventionInteroperability
◦Procurement policy + regulation/competition
A biased policy towards open code – ◦Data open to mash-ups (government)◦Systems interoperable (procurement)◦Use of alternatives to market leader (e.g.
Linux) Via competition remedies and sponsorship
Information regulation precedent
Must-carry/must-offer obligations, ◦ imposed on many market actors, ◦ including obliged to offer FRAND terms
(common carriers, broadband access providers, cable broadcasters, electronic program guides);
Interconnection requirements on telcos, ◦especially those with dominance—◦And AOL/Time Warner merger requirement for
instant messaging interoperability Application programming interfaces (API)
disclosure requirements, ◦placed on Microsoft by EC upheld by ECJ
EC Mandated Browser Choice
2011: MSFT refused to allow browser choice by default in Windows 7 ◦fined €561m March 2013, ◦previously fined €497m 2007 €860m
2012. Browser “error” expensive line of code
Kroes’ promise post-Microsoft
Will “seriously explore all options to ensure that significant market players cannot just choose to deny interoperability.
“The Commission should not need to run an epic antitrust case every time software lacks interoperability.”
Euro-Interoperability Framework
Response to multi-€bn competition cases:◦Microsoft saga (to 2009), Intel (2009), Apple
(2010), Rambus (2009) ◦Google (2013?) perhaps Facebook....◦Coates (2011: Chapters 5-6)
Announced by DG Comp (CONNECT) Commissioner Kroes 2009-2010
Bias in favour of interoperability in policyConcerns are broader than competition
◦ Include privacy, IPR, security, fundamental rights
Economics and Human RightsOpen data, open code, and human rights Blizzard of Internet governance principles 2011
◦ Law/economics, or human rights, do not translate◦ OECD/EC vs. UNHCR/OSCE/Council of Europe
This apparent dialogue of the deaf ◦ competition policy & corporate governance problem
Urgent task: dialogue between discrete expert fields◦ ICT growth driver and transformative technology◦ transformative role in communication and dialogue
‘arms trade’ in censorship technology; Twitter ‘revolution’ (sic)
EC Regulation (2013) Recital 41
“It is essential for the development of European standardisation to
continue fostering and encouraging the active participation of European organisations◦representing SMEs, consumers and
environmental and social interests. ◦Such organisations pursue an aim of
general European interest
Article 5.1European standardisation organisations shall encourage and facilitate
appropriate representation & effective participation
of all relevant stakeholders, including SMEs, consumer organisations
and environmental and social stakeholders ◦ in their standardisation activities.
They shall in particular encourage and facilitate such representation and participation through the European stakeholder organisations receiving Union financing
Developing study of code regulation
Similarities and cross-over with◦complexity science ◦network science◦web science/graph theory
Match Internet regulation to complexity theory Longstaff (2003), Cherry (2008), Schneider/Bauer (2007)
Network science fusion of scientific/fundamental elements from various components
Internet Science? EC Network of Excellence
Many Research Questions?
Book published 22 March 2013
‘Regulating Code’ in proceedings of ICIS, April 2013
‘Prosumer law’ paper for EuroCPR (March version now on SSRN)
‘Interoperability as a Code-Based Competition Remedy’ in Proceedings of IEEE SIIT
Comments welcome
Developing 2013 case studies1. Data protection in Social Networks
◦Enforcement failures, Privacy by Design◦Dominance, network effects, corporate
social irresponsibility
2. Search Neutrality◦Net neutrality argument◦Code-based solution to competition
problem◦Prosumer focus cf. Microsoft
Competition investigation both sides of Atlantic since 2010: ◦ Settled with US authorities 3
Jan 2013◦ Settlement proposal to EC 1
Feb 2013 Experts have severely
criticized timing and content of FTC settlement
Grimmelman argued: “If the final FTC statement had been any more favourable to Google, I’d be checking the file metadata to see whether Google wrote it.”
Google FTC and EC cases
Source: Google proposal leaked to SearchEngineLand, 25/4/13
Grimmelman argued:“If the final FTC statement had been any more favourable to Google, I’d be checking the file metadata to see whether Google wrote it.”
4 lines of complaintSearch bias: Google favours own products over competitors in results Vertical Search Opt-Out –
◦ Google don’t let websites opt out of particular uses of pages it indexes. ◦ complete opt-out giving up all Google traffic, a significant driver of traffic – ◦ especially Europe: Google has 90% search market in UK, Nl, France,
Germany
Restricted 3rd party use of AdWords: ◦ “API Client may not [function] copies data between Google and 3rd
Party.” ◦ Companies can advertise on Google and Bing, ◦ but cannot use a program to copy Google AdWords campaigns over to Bing. ◦ dropped by Google as token interoperability sop to FTC’s investigation;
Injunctions against standards-essential patents, ◦ including those by Google-acquired Motorola Mobility
see Posner’s now–famous judgment in June 2012
◦ FTC concluded (4-1) unfair competition, Google agreed not to engage in it ◦ fires a shot not just at Google, but also at rivals –clever concession by
Google!
Google and competitors routinely privately regulate other’s codepoints 3 and 4, Google claimed the right to
regulate others’ use of code, to use the AdWords API or to use Motorola Mobility’s
patents..
“Prosumer law” approach interoperability and content neutrality 1. Google to reinforce search neutrality
1. NOT bias results with search algorithms
2. relatively trivial (by Google standards) amendment to its code
1. allow websites more flexibility in listing, 2. rather than complete opt-out via the
existing robots.txt convention.
We do not make strong normative claim that Google should adopt neutral perspective
◦(nor do we adopt approach to net neutrality),
We advocate truth-in-advertising Any search engine (or ISP using
search) ◦claiming verifiably neutral results ◦produce the same
Or prominently advertise its product as
1. commercially driven, 2. affiliate-biased 3. selective search engine.
Requirement does not impose significant regulatory burdenreinforces the brands of search
providers of integrity. would not apply to selective search
providers if labelled such ‘a search engine which selectively
provides you with search results according in part to its commercial affiliations’ ◦ (or equivalent wording)
prominently displayed above search results in that case.
Code-based solutions lighter than €1b fines or structural separation
In book, we suggest similar approach ◦to network neutrality violators
could not advertise their services as allowing end-users’ choice ◦in accessing the ‘Internet’
when in fact it is a commercial Intranet ◦to which full access is provided.
Social networks: US solutions instead of EU non-enforcementFacebook’s 400m European users 27 national regulators of personal data. Facebook chose regulator relocated in 2006
◦ from Dublin to Portarlington, Co. Laois, Ireland, ◦ Google is also regulated from Portarlington.
While German state and federal regulators and others may rattle sabres at Facebook,
Irish regulator audited Facebook spring 2012 insisting on remedial action on nine counts
Prosumer law: direct intervention
Abusive dominant social networking sites
prevent Facebook, Google+ any other ◦from erecting a fence around its piece of
the information commons: ◦ensure interoperability with open
standards Which lowers entry barriers (in theory!) Enforcement of privacy law even in
Portarlington
50 ways to leave FacebookNot sufficient to permit data
deletion ◦as that only covers the user’s tracks.
Interconnection and interoperability, ◦more than transparency and ◦theoretical possibility to switch.
Ability for prosumers to interoperate to permit exit◦ Lower entry barriers tend to lead to increased
consumer welfare
US FTC constant auditClass actions: 2011 $8.5m Google Buzz. Jan 2013, Facebook $20mNov 2012, FTC Google settled for $22.5m
◦ tracking cookies for Safari browser users2012, both agreed to settle privacy complaints
◦ FTC privacy audit of products for a 20-year period.◦ That’s until 2032!
Sector-specific regulation of social networking already exists de facto in the United States,
Europeans wring their hands on the sidelines. ◦ proposed new European Regulation ◦ unlikely to be implemented before 2016.
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