World needs new rules for powerful tech: Web Summit
chief
Send a link to a friend
[November 06, 2017]
By Axel Bugge
LISBON (Reuters) - Tech companies like
Google and Facebook seem like monopolies and need new rules, the
organizer of one of the world's biggest technology summits said.
Paddy Cosgrave, whose annual Web Summit takes place in Lisbon this week,
joins growing calls for tighter regulation of big technology firms
especially after news that Russia may have manipulated the last U.S.
election with political advertisements on Facebook.
He said recent initiatives by European Commissioner for Competition
Margrethe Vestager could bring big changes for big tech companies and
help level the playing field in a sector which is having a profound
impact on societies.
Vestager, who will speak at the Web Summit on Tuesday, has levied huge
fines for unpaid taxes and unfair competition on big technology firms,
including Apple, Google and Amazon in the past couple of years.
"In economic terms these (companies) would appear to fall into a classic
definition of monopolies," Cosgrave told Reuters in an interview.
"And if she (Vestager) is successful she will probably set the standard
for the rest of the world and will usher in a fundamental change in how
the largest and most profitable companies in the history of the world
are treated. This changes the playing field for all other companies."
Cosgrave said that new technology had been assumed by many to be just
positive, but it often "can be incredibly disruptive".
[to top of second column] |
Paddy Cosgrave, co-founder of Web Summit, attends an interview with
Reuters in Lisbon, Portugal, November 5, 2017. Picture taken
November 5, 2017. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante
He said the need for new rules was similar to past technological shifts such as
the invention of cars.
"We had an operating system that, by and large with some modifications every
decade, worked for the last 200 years," Cosgrave said.
"And then suddenly, you'd have to be naive or have your head buried in the sand,
to not realize that the very fabric of our society, certainly western society,
feels like it's getting pulled and stretched in weird ways. I think we need ...
a new operating system."
Web Summit has grown into one of the world's largest technology conferences,
from 400 participants when it started in Dublin in 2010, to 59,000 participants
this week. It started as a venue for tech startups and includes investors, but
also increasingly politicians and regulators. U.N. Secretary General Antonio
Guterres is scheduled to attend the Lisbon summit.
(Reporting By Axel Bugge, editing by Andrei Khalip and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|