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  4. Module 1: Reading Seminar: The power of rules in the age of digital transformations: Understanding EU rules on digital services (DSA) and digital markets (DMA)

Module 1: Reading Seminar: The power of rules in the age of digital transformations: Understanding EU rules on digital services (DSA) and digital markets (DMA)

QPD Modul 1

 The power of rules in the age of digital transformations: Understanding EU rules on digital services (Digital Services Act (DSA)) and digital markets (Digital Markets Act (DMA))

In recent years, the European Union has enacted a series of important rules on digital services, markets, data and AI. Understanding the texts, their origins, and impact can help understand the normative dynamics of digitalization and the interaction between rules and power and laws and technology in online spaces.

In this reading seminar, we will examine the Digital Services Act (DSA, 2022) and the Digital Markets Act (DMA, 2022) and look at specific examples including content moderation obligations, disclosure obligations, risk assessments and mitigation measures, and obligations that gatekeepers have. Reading key parts of the laws will allow us to understand the language of rules and the modes of regulation.

The reading seminar is aimed at researchers from all disciplines who do not have in-depth prior knowledge of the texts. Legal knowledge is not required. The seminar requires a willingness to read the texts (available online) and engage in a discussion on them.

This seminar conveys the following key learnings:

  • a basic understanding of the content and scope of the legal texts covered,
  • contextual knowledge about the origins and critical reception of the laws,
  • the impact and limits of laws and time of digital transformation.

Duration of the seminar: 3-4 hours, max. 15 participants, online

Language: English

Registrationhttps://eveeno.com/311564140

Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Matthias C. Kettemann, LL.M. (Harvard), teaches innovation law at the University of Innsbruck and leads research programs at the Leibniz Institute for Media Research (Hans-Bredow-Institut), Hamburg, and the Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, Berlin. He is co-editor of a commentary on the DSA/DMA.

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