Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power

This article articulates a distinctive source of political influence of some technology firms, which we call platform power. Platform power inheres in companies of economic scale that provide the terms of access through which large numbers of consumers access goods, services, and information. Firms...

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Main Authors: Culpepper, P, Thelen, K
格式: Journal article
出版: SAGE Publications 2019
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author Culpepper, P
Thelen, K
author_facet Culpepper, P
Thelen, K
author_sort Culpepper, P
collection OXFORD
description This article articulates a distinctive source of political influence of some technology firms, which we call platform power. Platform power inheres in companies of economic scale that provide the terms of access through which large numbers of consumers access goods, services, and information. Firms with platform power benefit from a deference from policymakers, but this deference is not primarily a function of direct influence through lobbying or campaign contributions, nor does it come from the threat of disinvestment. Companies with platform power instead benefit from the tacit allegiance of consumers, who can prove a formidable source of opposition to regulations that threaten these platforms. Focusing on the critical role played by consumers in explaining the powers platform firms wield in the rich democracies lends insight as well into their distinctive vulnerabilities, which flow from events that split the consumer–platform alliance or that cue citizen, as opposed to consumer, political identities.
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spelling oxford-uuid:bcd9402c-afb4-4989-bd2f-d23f3aab28d52022-03-27T05:27:37ZAre we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform powerJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:bcd9402c-afb4-4989-bd2f-d23f3aab28d5Symplectic Elements at OxfordSAGE Publications2019Culpepper, PThelen, KThis article articulates a distinctive source of political influence of some technology firms, which we call platform power. Platform power inheres in companies of economic scale that provide the terms of access through which large numbers of consumers access goods, services, and information. Firms with platform power benefit from a deference from policymakers, but this deference is not primarily a function of direct influence through lobbying or campaign contributions, nor does it come from the threat of disinvestment. Companies with platform power instead benefit from the tacit allegiance of consumers, who can prove a formidable source of opposition to regulations that threaten these platforms. Focusing on the critical role played by consumers in explaining the powers platform firms wield in the rich democracies lends insight as well into their distinctive vulnerabilities, which flow from events that split the consumer–platform alliance or that cue citizen, as opposed to consumer, political identities.
spellingShingle Culpepper, P
Thelen, K
Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title_full Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title_fullStr Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title_full_unstemmed Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title_short Are we all Amazon Primed? Consumers and the politics of platform power
title_sort are we all amazon primed consumers and the politics of platform power
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