Eakinomics: Technology
Policy and the Pandemic
Ten days ago AAF began a policy of optional teleworking, and nearly
everyone has been working remotely since. Hopefully you did not notice.
Beginning today, the District of Columbia’s latest closure order goes into effect,
ceasing all activity at nonessential businesses. Hopefully you will not
notice.
As AAF’s Jennifer Huddleston points out in her new paper, if this pandemic had hit 10
years ago the capability to work remotely, maintain social distance, and
take classes from home would not have existed: “FaceTime is around a decade old. According to Pew Research, it was about 12 years
ago that the majority of Americans had broadband internet at home.
Streaming via services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video became
available around 2007, while services like Instacart and DoorDash have yet
to celebrate a decade in business. Yet in the recent days of social
distancing whether for work, school, or keeping up with friends, we’ve
embraced how these and many other tools make it far easier to stay home.”
But this is not simply a stroke of good fortune. It is a direct result of
the policy regime toward new technologies. The United States has relied on
a strategy of minimal regulatory interference that empowers innovators and
entrepreneurs. The result, according to Huddleston, is a “robust innovation
ecosystem [that] has benefited American consumers by providing
both a wide variety of choices and, in particular, free and low-cost
options for services that are available now in a time of crisis.”
And as we have now come to expect, there is a wealth of information
regarding COVID-19 available on internet platforms. Google launched a coronavirus information website with
state-based information and safety and precaution tips. Facebook hosted a live conversation between
the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease
Dr. Anthony Fauci and Mark Zuckerberg. But much of the content we’re
enjoying is generated by their users.
A specific law, Section 230, is largely responsible
for enabling the rise of online platforms that allow us to share and create
such content. Most recently, coronavirus-related searches and hashtags have
dominated online conversations, but user-generated content extends far
beyond those. “Many have found welcome relief in the zoos and aquariums
posting videos of animals exploring their relatively human-free locations,
while parents who now find themselves helping teach children have access to
various message boards, lesson plans, and more.” Section 230 limits the
liability of platforms for the content that users post, a protection that
makes such platforms viable and content available.
The American advantage is not its tech sector; it’s the technology policy
that engendered its tech sector.
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