Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T11:22:44.481Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Saving the internet? The limits of platform power amid the techlash

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2024

Michael Kemmerling*
Affiliation:
Cologne Center for Comparative Politics (CCCP), University of Cologne, Köln, Germany
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Research on platform power indicates a preference alignment between consumers and platforms against regulation. However, recent scandals have changed public opinion toward platforms and undermined their structural coalition with consumers. I argue that amid the techlash, platforms need to actively mobilize the public and face an uphill battle in doing so. Based on the outside lobbying literature, I expect that platforms’ success in reframing the debate and signaling public discontent to policymakers depends on the perceptibility of the target audience (the bonding surface) and the characteristics of competing interest groups. I test my expectations by analyzing platform outside lobbying against the 2019 European Copyright Directive. I combine process-tracing and time-series analysis with textual data. A comparison between the German and French debates revealed that platform outside lobbying failed because negative media reporting, public opinion, and a creative economy dominated by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in France provided a favorable bonding surface for the frames of pro-copyright groups. Pro-copyright groups could credibly criticize platforms’ exploitative practices and demand fair artist remuneration, while platforms’ frames did not stick. This study demonstrates that claims of structural platform power are exaggerated and that careful attention needs to be paid to lobbying dynamics.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Vinod K. Aggarwal

Introduction

Recent research on business power argues that platforms, digital infrastructures that connect at least two groups of usersFootnote 1 , enjoy an alignment of preferences with consumers: Because consumers are simultaneously dependent on and liberated by (free) platform services, vote-seeking politicians shy away from regulation for fear of public backlashFootnote 2 . Copyright should be a prime example of this structural consumer-platform alliance because content platforms provide consumers with free access to creative works—access that would be restricted by strict copyright. However, the 2019 European Union Copyright Directive (EUCD) created encompassing obligations on platforms to remove copyright infringements by their users (i.e., intermediary liability). The adoption of the EUCD fits into an increase in regulatory activity and a shift in public opinion toward Big Tech—the so-called techlash.Footnote 3 I argue that the techlash changes the dynamics of platform power and that the structural perspective on platform power needs to be reconsidered. Instead of enjoying the latent support of liberated consumers against regulation, platforms need to actively create such an alliance and fight an uphill battle against skeptical public opinion. Amid the techlash, the creation of an alliance between platforms and the public becomes the puzzle to be explained rather than a structural feature of the platform business model. This paper accordingly asks under what conditions can platforms successfully create a coalition with the public to influence policymakers?

To answer this question, I derive a mechanism of platform outside lobbying, i.e., the mobilization of the public by platforms to influence policymakers, and its scope conditions from the existing literature. I argue that platforms, through their ownership of network infrastructure and an intermediary position within networks, are uniquely positioned to reach and target a broad and diverse group of users. While their structural position allows platforms to increase issue-salience, their success in signaling discontent to policymakers depends on the stickiness of their frames in the public debate. Frame stickiness, in turn, depends on (1) the perceptibility of the target audience (the bonding surface) and (2) the characteristics of competing interest groups (the glue).

To test my claims, I use the complementary strengths of process-tracing and time-series analysis. While both generate within-case evidence, process-tracing adds analytical depth and time-series analysis incorporates many actors and straightforward operationalizations of framing and salience. In addition to qualitative evidence from newspapers, legislators’ social media, and parliamentary records, I track issue salience and framing by applying an original dictionary to textual data collected from Twitter, newspapers of reference, and interest group websites.

I find that while platforms were successful in raising the issue salience across the EU, they were only successful in reframing the debate and influencing MEPs in some countries. Comparing Germany, where platform outside lobbying was successful, with the unsuccessful French case, I find that pro-copyright frames stuck better in French. I show that this is because of a more perceptible bonding surface, as the media narrative was already critical of Big Tech before the introduction of the EUCD, public opinion was in favor of stricter content regulation, and the creative economy consists mainly of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and individuals. This made demands for fair remuneration and the delegitimization of platforms more credible and enabled pro-copyright groups to prevail in interest group competition. In the German case, less critical media reporting, higher public support for pre-EUCD content regulation, and a high concentration of the media sector provided a more favorable bonding surface for anti-copyright and pro-platform frames. In German-speaking countries, anti-copyright groups therefore prevailed in the framing competition and signaled public discontent to their MEPs.

My findings contribute to the literature on business power by adding a strategic perspective to structural accounts of platform power. This not only shows that the techlash changes the dynamics of platform power and that initial claims of platform power have been exaggerated. It also suggests that we need a more integrated discussion of structural and instrumental (platform) power because structural factors, such as the platform business model or the concentration of the creative economy, influence the success of lobbying strategies. Finally, I contribute by combining qualitative and quantitative methods for the analysis of within-case evidence in an innovative way.

In the next section, I review the platform power and outside lobbying literatures. I then discuss the research design, data sources, and methodology of the study. Section three provides an overview of the policy area of copyright before I analyze the process of platform outside lobbying against the EUCD in eight EU languages. I then examine why platform outside lobbying was successful in the German but not in the French debate. Section four concludes.

Outside lobbying and the platform business model

Scholars of business power increasingly study how digitalization, particularly the platform business model, shapes corporate powerFootnote 4 . Platforms are “digital infrastructures that enable two or more groups to interact”.Footnote 5 They provide the standards and technology for these interactions and all interactions run through the platform as an intermediary.Footnote 6 While different types of platforms are distinguishedFootnote 7 , copyright is mostly relevant to content platforms. These platforms such as Google, YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter offer users free access to (user-generated) content (e.g., videos, music, and news) in exchange for behavioral data and targeted advertisementsFootnote 8 . Thus, the groups connected over content platforms are consumers, content creators and rightsholders, and advertisers. Consumers and suppliers are dependent on the platform because of its infrastructural character and high market concentrationFootnote 9 . Scholars of the economic power of platforms argue that this enables platforms to appropriate value from dependent businessesFootnote 10 . Scholars of the political power of platforms, instead, argue that dependence, in combination with consumer liberation, “largely automatic[ally]” creates a platform-consumer coalition against regulation because platforms are “integrated into the fabric of [consumers’] daily lives”Footnote 11 . While studies show that the success of this coalition varies with cross-national differences in institutionsFootnote 12 , the heterogeneity of the coalitionFootnote 13 , and the responsiveness of policymakers to public pressureFootnote 14 , the role of framing and issue-salience has been largely overlooked.Footnote 15 This is surprising for two reasons:

First, both regulatory activityFootnote 16 and public opinionFootnote 17 toward Big Tech changed substantially because of the so-called techlash. Scandals such as the Snowden leaks, Cambridge Analytica, or uncompetitive business practices resulted in a shift from “techno-utopianism” to “techno-dystopianism”.Footnote 18 As platforms lost their aura of consumer liberation and public discourse focused more on the negative side of the platform business model, an automatic consensus against regulation becomes unlikely. Following Culpepper, scandals put businesses “under intense public scrutiny” and require business to fight defensive battles in a “radically changed political environment”.Footnote 19 The second reason why the negligence of framing and salience is surprising is that platforms are in a unique position to strategically use outside lobbying tactics to fight this defensive battle.

Outside lobbying

Outside lobbying describes “attempts by interest group leaders to mobilize citizens outside the policymaking community to contact or pressure” policymakersFootnote 20 . Outside lobbying has two components.

The first component of outside lobbying is conflict expansion. Interest groups need to raise issue-salience, lower the costs of mobilization, and change evaluations of an issue (framing)Footnote 21 . Increasing issue-salience is important to gain attention and to mobilize existing supportersFootnote 22 . More importantly, however, most interest groups need to recruit new supporters through framing.

Framing describes the selection of “some aspects of a perceived reality and mak[ing] them more salient in a communicating text […] to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, moral evaluation, and/or treatment recommendation”Footnote 23 . A frame therefore provides a rationale for a position toward a policy. Since most policies and issues are multidimensional, interest groups can use framing to highlight those issue dimensions that align with their preferred positions in order to influence public or elite opinionFootnote 24 .

Pushing a preferred frame, however, does not in itself influence policy decisions. Instead, interest groups need to change the collective definition of an issue in order to be influential. Successful framing, thus, depends on how well a frame sticks with the target audience. A frame’s stickiness is determined by the perceptibility of the target audience (the bonding surface) and the characteristics of competing interest groups (the glue).

First, frames need a perceptible bonding surface to stick to. Chong and Druckman argue that successful frames are connected to “a positive idea or value that is widely available in the population”Footnote 25 . Similarly, successful frames relate to dimensions previously emphasized in related debates. For instance, frames that “give[…] a coherent overall structure to a number of arguments that have […] been around for decades”Footnote 26 are stickier. Finally, interest groups can enjoy first-mover advantages when framing a new issue or face obstacles when pushing a frame in a longstanding and cluttered issue areaFootnote 27 .

Second, a frame sticks to the right surface only if the right glue is used. The credibility of the source from which a frame originates and the perception of an interest group as manipulative influence the stickiness of frames.Footnote 28 . At the coalition level, the unity and frequency with which an interest group coalition pushes a frame affect its success.Footnote 29 As framing is a competitive processFootnote 30 , competing sides can challenge each other’s credibility and push counterframes that undermine the original framingFootnote 31 . Therefore, not only the stickiness of one’s own frames but also that of the frames pushed by opposing interest groups determines lobbying successFootnote 32 .

In addition to conflict expansion, outside lobbying involves signaling public opinion and electoral consequences to policymakers. Signal strength is crucial for outside lobbying successFootnote 33 . KollmanFootnote 34 argues that interest groups already supported by public opinion can send more credible signals to policymakers because they face smaller mobilization costs. While in the absence of outside lobbying campaigns the relationship between public support and lobbying success is negativeFootnote 35 , outside lobbying is indeed more successfulFootnote 36 when public support is high. Additionally, big and diverse coalitions signal broad societal support to policymakers and are more successful (outside) lobbyistsFootnote 37 , especially under conditions of high salienceFootnote 38 . Further, signal strength is also determined by how successful conflict expansion was, i.e., issue salience, mobilization, and whether the framing is unambiguousFootnote 39 .

To sum up, outside lobbying success depends on initial public opinion, an interest groups’ ability to expand the conflict, and the strength of the signal to policymakers. Given that business tends to lobby against public opinion and is more successful when salience is lowFootnote 40 , it is unsurprising that outside lobbying is more frequently used by labor unions and citizen groupsFootnote 41 . Dür and MateoFootnote 42 argue that citizen groups need to signal their engagement to a diffuse group of supporters to ensure organizational survival, whereas business organizations represent “a clearly defined constituency for which political decisions have concentrated costs and benefits”. Further, business can typically afford resource intensive inside lobbying and possess specialized information that they can trade for accessFootnote 43 . However, this does neither mean that business does not use outside lobbying strategiesFootnote 44 nor that it cannot do so successfullyFootnote 45 . In fact, I argue below that platforms, as a special type of business, are uniquely positioned to mobilize the public.

Platform outside lobbying and its limits

I argue that because of the techlash platforms face an uphill battle against public opinion. However, platforms have three advantages for outside lobbying built-in their business model. Through their intermediary position they can reach network users easily by posting messages on their apps or websites. Because of the winner-takes-all logic of platforms their reach exceeds that of even the biggest conventional interest groups both in numbers and in diversity. Platforms also have free and frequent access to users because they are embedded in users’ daily routines. Users approach the platform, while conventional interest groups have to approach supporters to expand conflict. Third, because platforms surveil all network interactionsFootnote 46 , messages can easily be targeted to users.

This combination of reach, access, and targeting provides platforms with a built-in solution to successfully make people aware of an issue (salience), frame it, and provide users with a course of action (mobilization). Figure 1 displays the mechanism of platform outside lobbying. The central independent variable is platform opposition to legislation. To prevent legislation, platforms engage in conflict expansion (part I), i.e., influence the debate in traditional and social media by (1) increasing issue-salience, (2) pushing favorable frames, and (3) mobilizing the public. As a result, media reporting increases and issue evaluations change. Additionally, the public is mobilized and joins protest actions such as demonstrations, online petitions, or letters/emails to their representatives (part II). While actions by the traditional media, social media, and the public reinforce each other (grey dashed arrow), the public debate signals electoral consequences to legislators. The signal is stronger the more unified the debate. Legislators respond by retracting their support (outcome).

Figure 1. Summary of the platform outside lobbying mechanism.

Following the structural perspective of platform power, successful platform outside lobbying should not be surprising in copyright legislation because consumers enjoy free access as a direct benefit from weak copyright. Indeed, in 2012 platforms successfully used outside lobbying against copyright legislation in the USFootnote 47 . In the case of the EUCD, however, the techlash provided a perceptible bonding surface for anti-platform and pro-copyright frames. I therefore expect (1) that in countries where the public was less (more) accustomed to critical reporting on Big Tech, platform outside lobbying has better (worse) success chances. I expect further (2) that the characteristics of competing interest groups influence the success of platform outside lobbying. This involves the relative frequency with that a frame is pushed, the unity of the coalition pushing it, and the credibility of an interest group pushing a frame. For instance, SMEs are more credible than big businesses when highlighting the exploitative nature of platforms. Conversely, frames that emphasize user rights are more credible when criticizing major rightsholders rather than artists. In the following section, I present my methodological approach to test these expectations.

Research design

This paper combines process-tracing and time-series analysis based on textual data to investigate the scope conditions of successful platform outside lobbying.

Combining process-tracing and time-series methods

Process-tracing aims to uncover the mechanism, i.e., the entities and activities that connect a cause and an outcomeFootnote 48 . Inferences in process-tracing are based on context-specific within-case observations that are compared to the theoretical expectations. While the compatibility between quantitative evidence and process-tracing is disputedFootnote 49 , I argue that time-series analysis is ontologically compatible with process-tracing. Time-series analysis analyses within-case observations and has the central assumption of temporal precedence. Time-series analysis can therefore produce evidence for/against the sequence proposed in a mechanismFootnote 50 .

Combining process-tracing with time-series analysis is beneficial in two ways. First, by explicitly theorizing the mechanism and collecting qualitative evidence, process-tracing adds depth to time-series analysis and contextualizes findings of temporal precedence. Second, quantitative analysis is beneficial in situations where too many entities are engaged in a process for an encompassing qualitative analysis (e.g., interest group lobbying) and steps of the mechanism are easier to measure quantitatively (e.g., framing and salience).

My goal is to uncover the scope conditions of successful platform outside lobbying amid the techlash. Thus, I compare a deviant case with a typical caseFootnote 51 . After analyzing the debate on the EUCD in eight languages, I decided to dive deeper into the German and French cases. In Germany platform outside lobbying succeeded despite the techlash in signaling public opposition to MEPs. In France, in contrast, platform outside lobbying failed to create this signal.

Data collection and dictionary construction

To quantitatively trace the process, I collected data from Twitter, national newspapers of reference, the EU transparency register, and interest group websites. I collected 3,000,000 tweets and 1010 newspaper articles from 11 EU countries on the EUCD via the Twitter Academic API, Nexis Uni and Factiva.Footnote 52 For a list of newspapers and search queries see appendix A1-A2.

Second, I collected data on the interest groups active on copyright by scraping the EU transparency register through lobbyfacts.eu. I also included interest groups that submitted a non-anonymous answer to the public consultation on the review of the EU copyright rules of 2014. I scraped data on their inside lobbying activities, their website entries referring to the reforms, and their Twitter handles (see appendix A3 for a detailed description of data gathering)Footnote 53 .

Finally, I manually coded the interest groups’ type as either rightsholder (companies and business associations from media, publishing, telecom, manufacturing, and the chemical sector); creatives; platforms and their business associations; the civil society coalition; lobbying agencies; other; and a category including firms that are platforms and substantial rightsholders (Platform & ICT & Media, e.g., Microsoft, Netflix).

Using interest groups testimonies in their consultation responses, public communications on blogs and websites, and platforms’ online protests I constructed an original dictionary. The dictionary aims to identify the frames used in the debate. Based on a list of words associated with each frame, the dictionary identifies frames in each tweet, each paragraph of the newspaper articles, and each paragraph of interest group website entries. I analyze paragraphs rather than full articles or websites because of their greater topical and evaluative coherency. Each text is classified into either including the frame (1) or not (0) depending on whether it includes at least one of the key words. Within the same text multiple frames can be present.

A dictionary method is preferable to unsupervised methods of quantitative text analysis as the goal is to trace the prevalence of known frames rather than detecting unknown framesFootnote 54 . The full dictionary is available in the reproduction data, and Table 1 shows all frames, how they depict the legislation, and example keywords.

Table 1: Frames used in the debate on the EUCD

Note: See replication data for the full dictionary.

To analyze debates on the EUCD, the English dictionary was translated to Dutch, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, and Spanish using Google translate. While purpose-specific dictionaries perform wellFootnote 55 and the automatic translation of dictionaries generally yields good resultsFootnote 56 , validation is paramountFootnote 57 . To validate the English dictionary, a student assistant hand-coded a random sample of 500 tweets and 500 newspaper paragraphs for both cases. The German dictionary was validated in the same way to assess the performance of Google translate. Intercoder agreement (Fleiss’ Kappa) ranges between 0.67 (German: 0.5) and 1.0 (German: 1.0) with less frequent frames having lower values. Figure A1-A4 display additional validity measures.

Before applying the dictionary, I converted the text to lower case and removed punctuation, stopwords, and double spaces. To detect multi-word phrases, I included tetragrams.

Time-series analysis

To further analyze how outside lobbying affected framing, I run time-series regressions. I run analyses for each language and for the full sample. The time-series starts with the first proposal of the EUCD in September 2016.

I use vectorautoregressions (VAR) to estimate the effect of platform outside lobbying on the net framing of the debate in newspapers and tweets. The dependent variable is computed as the summed relative frequency of the pro-copyright frames (Fair Pay & Creator Rights + Criminality & Public Safety + Bad Platforms & Market Power + Astroturfing) minus the summed relative frequency of anti-copyright frames (Censorship & Uploadfilter + Break the Internet + User Rights & Cybersecurity). The more negative the dependent variable, the more anti-copyright is the net framing of the debate. My key independent variables are platforms’ protest actions such as website blackouts, display of censorship banners, or a coordinated ad campaign on YouTube (see below). I also control for parliamentary events, i.e., the introduction of the directive, parliamentary hearings and debates, and the proceeding of the EUCD to the next stage. The variables are included as exogenous variables and modeled as an intervention covariateFootnote 58 . I coded the time-period when the parliamentary event/outside lobbying occurred as one and let the effect depreciate by a factor of 0.5 for the following time-periods to model medium-term effects.Footnote 59

I further include five variables to capture the relative framing in (1) all tweets, (2) newspapers, (3) tweets of legislators, (4) website entries and tweets of pro-copyright interest groups (i.e., rightsholders and creatives), and (5) website entries and tweets of anti-copyright interest groups (i.e., platforms and the civil society coalition). The latter encompass traditional forms of outside lobbying such as press releases, reports on (upcoming) events, or media campaigns. These variables are included as endogenous variables to reflect that the framing in one medium reacts to changes in other media and vice versa. All variables are computed separately by language except for interest group communications. For these I took the full sample, because of insufficient data in most languages and to model the pan-European character of most interest groups websites. The VAR regressions also include a dummy variable controlling for weekends. All time-series were tested negatively for a unit root.

In all models, I specified the lag structure to eliminate serial correlation and used heteroscedasticity-robust standard-errors where augmented Dickey-Fuller tests indicated heteroscedasticity. Unless otherwise noted p < 0.05 is considered significant. Full regression results can be found in tables A2-A9.

Platform outside lobbying against the EUCD

In this section I will go through each part of the mechanism and evaluate it against the empirical evidence. While I find that platforms successfully raised the salience across the EU, they were only successful in pushing their frames to the media and public and signaling public opposition to MEPs in some EU countries. To find out why anti-copyright frames failed to stick, I compare the French and German cases which represent two ends of the spectrum of (un)successful platform outside lobbying. Before diving into the empirics on outside lobbying, however, I will give a short overview of the legislative process of the EUCD and inside lobbying activities.

Copyright aims to provide incentives for creativity and innovation by transforming an intangible idea into a tangible resource. Traditionally, copyright was a technical and low saliency policy area dominated by rightsholders’ interestsFootnote 60 . This changed with the advent of digitalization. In the mid-2000s, the consumer internet and content platforms challenged existing legislation and threatened rightsholders’ business models, because they decentralized the reproduction and distribution of content Footnote 61 .

To address this issue the European Commission initiated a review process of the EU’s copyright legislation in 2012. After several stakeholder consultations the European Union Copyright Directive was drafted in 2016 and passed in 2019. The EUCD’s article 17 (draft article 13) introduced requirements for intermediaries to proactively prevent copyright infringements by their users and article 15 (draft article 11) introduced a direct copyright for publishers when online platforms link to or embed their content. Although initially the EUCD enjoyed almost unanimous support with policymakers and public interest was low (figure 2), an intense lobbying battle started to ensue in 2016Footnote 62 .

Figure 2. Salience of EUCD in newspaper articles and tweets.

Two sides were active in this battle: Rightsholders and creatives, such as the music industry, sports leagues, artists, and press publishers lobbied for stricter copyright and enhanced intermediary liabilityFootnote 63 , to protect their centralized distribution and reproduction channels. Platforms and a civil society coalition were on the other side of the battle. Particularly content platforms challenge centralized distribution channels and have a vested interest against increased intermediary liabilityFootnote 64 . Digitalization also created and empowered a civil society coalition of open-source activists, internet users, libraries, and digital rights groupsFootnote 65 . While both sides spent substantial resources on inside lobbying and had direct contact with commission officials and MEPs, rightsholders and creatives consistently out-lobbied platforms and the civil society coalitionFootnote 66 . In contrast to the big American content platforms, most rightsholders are also headquartered in Europe and the creative sectors play an important role in the EU’s economy employing 3.6 percent of total employees and making up 2.68 percent of value-added in 2016Footnote 67 .

Thus, despite their substantial inside lobbying power, platforms and the civil society groups faced an uphill battle for influence. To prevail in this battle, platforms utilized their unique position as owners of and intermediaries in centralized networks and started a substantial outside lobbying campaign against the EUCD in June 2018.

Part 1: Platforms engage in conflict expansion against the EUCD

After the Judiciary Committee of the European Parliament moved the EUCD to the plenary in June 2018, platforms and the civil society coalition tried to mobilize the public against it. Google urged press publishers to contact MEPs and express opposition, YouTube creators began criticizing the directive in their videos, tech pioneers wrote an open letter to the EU, and an online petition to “SaveTheInternet” eventually reached over 5 million signaturesFootnote 68 . On July 4 and 5 the English, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Polish, Latvian, and Estonian Wikipedia pages blacked out and/or displayed protests banners against the directiveFootnote 69 . Amid these online protests, the parliament sent the bill back for amendments. However, on September 12, 2018, it adopted the draft and initiated trilogue negotiations to mitigate disagreements between the Council, the Commission, and the Parliament. In October, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki urged YouTubers to cover the reform and use #saveyourinternet leading to a spike in videosFootnote 70 . Twitch made a similar move in DecemberFootnote 71 . In November, YouTube displayed ads before videos informing users about the EUCDFootnote 72 . Finally, on March 21, 2019, five days before the final vote in the EP, many medium-sized platforms, among them Twitch, Reddit, and PornHub, ran protest banners on their websites (March blackouts)Footnote 73 . During these protest events, platforms urged users to contact MEPs and express opposition to the EUCD. In addition, demonstrations took place in 20 countries after the March blackoutsFootnote 74 . In Germany up to 100,000 people participated and demonstrations were substantial in Austria, Switzerland, Poland, and SwedenFootnote 75 . Platforms and the civil society groups, thus, engaged in different forms of outside lobbying to expand the conflict around the EUCD.

Part 2.1: The effect of conflict expansion on salience and framing

Were platforms successful in conflict expansion? Conflict expansion involves increasing issue-salience, pushing frames into the debate, and mobilizing the public. Figures 2 and 3 show descriptive results on how successful conflict expansion was in newspapers and tweets across the full, multi-language sample, and across different languages in the EU.

Figure 3. Net relative frame frequency in newspaper articles and tweets on EUCD.

Figure 2A depicts the number of newspaper articles and tweets by week and highlights specific platform outside lobbying events through vertical lines. It shows that issue-salience increased substantially in European newspapers and on Twitter in anticipation and during the Wikipedia blackouts. The EP’s adoption of the EUCD’s proposal in September 2018 also led salience to spike. During YouTube’s ad campaign salience was consistently higher than before the Wikipedia blackouts. Finally, the March blackouts were followed by a huge spike in salience leading to the highest number of newspaper articles and tweets.

Turning to the by-language samples, figure 2B depicts the average number of newspaper articles or tweets per day before and between the different platform outside lobbying events (phases). It reveals substantial differences in salience between languages. Reporting on the EUCD was quite salient in German, Polish, French, Italian, and English but not in Spanish, Portuguese, and Dutch newspapers. On Twitter, the vast majority of tweets on the EUCD is German or English. Spanish, French, Polish, and Italian tweets were also somewhat frequent, but Dutch and Portuguese were not. While the overall level of salience differs across languages, salience in all languages substantially increased after platform outside lobbying events (figure 2B). Overall, platform outside lobbying successfully raised the salience of the topic across all languages but to different degrees.

The second component of conflict expansion is to influence the framing of the debate. Figure 3 depicts the net relative frequency of pro-copyright frames by language and phase. Negative values indicate that anti-copyright frames where more frequent and positive values indicate that pro-copyright frames where more frequent. Figure 4 depicts the significant results of the VAR of platform outside lobbying events on the net framing of the debate (negative effects indicate the debate became more anti-copyright).

Figure 4. Results of VAR intervention analysis on relative framing of EUCD. Note: Only languages where at least one platform intervention was significant are displayed. Full results in appendix.

In Dutch, German, and Portuguese newspapers, the debate was slightly anti-copyright even before platforms started their campaign. In English it was slightly pro-copyright, whereas in French, Italian, Polish, and Spanish it was distinctively pro-copyright. After platforms started their campaigns, the debate turned distinctively anti-copyright in Dutch and German. For German, this is also supported by the VAR results, where the March blackouts made the debate significantly more anti-copyright (figure 4). Although the debate became more negative after platform’s actions, it remained balanced in Polish and slightly pro-copyright in Italian (figure 3). In English, the Wikipedia blackout surprisingly turned the debate more pro-copyright but the YouTube ad campaign reversed this trend and after the March blackouts the debate became slightly anti-copyright. In Spanish, platform outside lobbying turned the debate distinctively anti-copyright but the March blackouts somewhat reversed this trend (figure 3).

The most interesting findings are in French and Portuguese. In French, the Wikipedia blackouts significantly increased the net frequency of pro-copyright frames (figure 4), but descriptive results indicate that the YouTube ad campaign turned the debate more anti-copyright (figure 3). However, at least in the descriptive results, after the March blackouts the debate turned substantially more pro-copyright again (figure 3). The platform blackouts in French, thus, had the opposite effect than intended. This also holds in the descriptive results for Portuguese (figure 3).

Figure 3 also reveals that the framing on Twitter was consistently more negative than in newspapers even before platforms started outside lobbying. During no phase and in no language the net framing on Twitter was pro-copyright. However, in French the debate was balanced throughout most phases (except during YouTube’s ad campaign). Surprisingly, in all languages the platform outside lobbying campaign was followed by a more positive framing of the EUCD. This is likely due to an increase in salience which led to a lower proportion of tweets by internet activists and content creators in all tweets. While in most languages the debate remained anti-copyright nevertheless, it became quite balanced in French, Polish, and Dutch. Figure 4 reveals that the YouTube ads significantly made the relative framing more anti-copyright in Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian. Contradicting the descriptive results, the March blackouts also significantly promoted anti-copyright frames relative to pro-copyright frames in Italian (figure 4). Finally, Figure 4 also reveals that the relative framing of the debate among MEPs on Twitter became significantly more anti-copyright in Portuguese after the YouTube ads started. Most importantly the March blackouts had significant but opposite effects among German and French MEPs. In German, their tweets became more anti-copyright, whereas in French MEPs’ tweets became substantially more pro-copyright.

The combined evidence from Figure 3 and 4 reveal quite some variation across languages in the effects of platform outside lobbying on the framing of the debate. French and German are at different ends of the spectrum of this variation. I therefore analyze the French and German cases in more detail in the next section.

Part 2.2: Frames and their stickiness in German and French debates

Figure 5 provides a detailed overview of the relative frequency of 12 frames in all newspaper articles and tweets in French (asterisk) and German (dot). Three differences between the languages become evident in traditional and social media: First, the censorship & uploadfilter frame that highlights the negative impact of the EUCD on freedom of expression is far more frequent in German than in French. Second, the fair pay & creators frame that highlights the positive impact of the EUCD on artists’ remuneration for their creative works is far more frequent in French than in German. Third, the lobbying, misinformation, and bad platforms & market power frames are (far) more frequent in French than in German. Why did these different frames stick in French and German? As described in the theory section, frame stickiness depends on the frame-specific perceptibility of the target audience (the bonding surface) and the characteristics of competing interest groups (the glue). In what follows, I will go through these two factors for French and German.

Figure 5. Framing of EUCD in French and German newspaper articles and tweets.

Bonding surface: perceptibility of the public to frames

I find that the differences in framing in French and German can be traced back to differences in the perceptibility of the target audiences toward specific frames. Importantly, existing debates and public opinion toward Big Tech and content regulation and the size of firms in the domestic creative sector created different bonding surfaces.

Figure 6 maps the salience of terms referring to tech scandals such as tax evasion, data breaches, or surveillance in European-, French-, and German-language newspapersFootnote 76 . Figure 6 starts in 2013, the year of the Snowden leaks and one of Big Tech’s first major scandals. It shows that negative reporting on Big Tech remained relatively salient in most of Europe after 2013, challenging an automatic consumer-platform alliance. However, in French and German, the media narrative toward Big Tech differed substantially. In German, negative reporting steadily decreased until 2017. After a slight increase in 2018, the year platforms started outside lobbying on the EUCD, negative reporting decreased again to 33 percent of 2013 levels in 2019. In contrast, reporting in French newspapers’ stabilized at around 55 percent and began to increase in 2017. In 2018 and 2019, the salience of the techlash in French newspapers reached the same level as in 2013. I argue that since French-speaking journalists and readers already were more accustomed to negative reporting on Big Tech, frames highlighting the outsized market power and exploitative practices of platforms found a more perceptible bonding surface than in German-speaking countries.

Figure 6. Salience of techlash in newspapers.

Note: Data on Portuguese, Maltese, and Belgian French-language newspapers is only available from 2015 and not included. “Other languages” refers to English, Spanish, Polish, Italian, and Dutch.

Public opinion on the effectiveness of existing content regulation also differed critically between France and Germany. A Flash Eurobarometer from June 2018, right before the platforms’ outside lobbying campaign took off, reveals virtually no difference between French and Germans regarding their overwhelming support for the protection of freedom of expression online (Q1.3) and arrangements “to limit the spread of illegal content” (Q1.2). Thus, citizens, in principle, perceived the goals of anti-copyright and pro-copyright groups as equally legitimate. However, 56% of French respondents thought that the existing provisions of platforms to tackle illegal content were ineffective (vs. 38% of Germans; Q1.4). That a majority of the French perceived the pre-EUCD situation as insufficient suggests that they might have been more susceptible to fair pay and creator rights frames than Germans.

Finally, differences in the economic structure of the cultural economy of France and Germany provided a bonding surface for frames delegitimizing rightsholders and creatives as big business lobbyists in German, whereas they made the fair remuneration and creator rights frame more credible in France. Eurostat data on the number of persons employed per enterprise in the cultural economy in 2019 reveal that the sector is most concentrated in Germany (6.4), while France is below average (2.6)Footnote 77 . This difference is particularly pronounced in the publishing sectors, in particular newspaper publishing (236 vs. 16.7)Footnote 78 . Frames highlighting a market asymmetry and exploitative relation between Big Tech and small artists were thus more credible in France than in Germany. In addition, the high concentration of the creative sector in Germany created a bonding surface for frames delegitimizing rightsholders and artists as agents of big business.

In France, the existing media narrative, public opinion on content regulation, and the structure of the creative economy created a good bonding surface for the fair pay and creator rights frame and the delegitimization of the anti-copyright coalition. In Germany, in contrast, the media narrative against Big Tech was less negative, the need to reform content regulation was perceived less pressing, and the creative economy was highly concentrated. Frames, however, do not stick even to the best bonding surface if the groups pushing them apply weak glue.

Characterists of competing interest groups (the glue)

In addition to the bonding surface, the stickiness of a frame is determined by the characteristics of competing interest groups. This involves (1) the (relative) frequency with that a frame is pushed, (2) the unity of the coalition pushing it, and (3) the credibility and legitimacy of the frame. While platform outside lobbying events follow a similar pattern across French- and German-speaking countries, there are considerable differences in the composition of and the frequency and unity of the frames pushed by the anti-copyright coalition.

The outside lobbying data from interest groups websites and tweets reveal substantial differences in composition. While the number of rightsholder (FR: 27 vs. DE: 24) and anti-copyright civil society groups (12 vs. 16) that posted on the EUCD is rather similar, more interest groups representing creatives (21 vs. 9) posted in French and more platforms in German (3 vs. 6). Additionally, the composition of the pro-copyright groups in the inside lobbying data differs substantially. Reflecting the concentration of the creative economy in Germany, most German pro-copyright groups were big businesses such as Springer, Bertelsmann, Wiley, or DeGruyter (all publishers), sports leagues, television and movie firms, or the chemical industry (table A1). Representatives from German publishers were also key actors in the European-level Publishing AssociationsFootnote 79 . In contrast, French rightsholder groups mostly represented small enterprises and individual creatives, although there were some big movie and TV associations/businesses (table A1).

The composition of the German pro-copyright coalition was used by anti-copyright groups to delegitimize their activities as big business lobbyism. Especially Springer became a focal point with demonstrations in front of their headquarters and tweets highlighting the close connection between Springer and the CDU/CSUFootnote 80 . Pro-copyright politicians including rapporteur Axel Voss, Commissioner Günther Oettinger (both CDU/CSU), and Helga Trüpel (Greens) were criticized for their close connections to the publishers. Especially the CDU/CSU was attacked by anti-copyright activists with #niewiederCDU (#CDUneveragain)). In contrast to the French debate, were the conflict was depicted as between small creatives and Big Tech, in German the perceived conflict was between competing business lobbies which delegitimized claims of the pro-copyright coalition.

Differences between the countries are also reflected in the frequency and unity with which groups pushed specific frames. In German, the civil society and platform groups unified around the censorship & uploadfilter and the break the internet frames and pushed it very frequently (figure 7). As Figure 7 reveals, the censorship & uploadfilter frame stuck with newspapers and on Twitter. This is also consistent with public opinion of Germans regarding freedom of expression on the internet (see above).

Figure 7. Relative frequency of frames pushed by interest group type.

In French, surprisingly rightsholders are the most active group in distributing anti-copyright frames. Looking at the content of these posts, the frames are largely used to delegitimize claims of the anti-copyright coalition. For instance, rightsholders retweeted an allegation that many of the tweets containing saveyourinternet were sent from Washington, DC “the lobbying base” of Big TechFootnote 81 , urged users to not “believe anyone who says the #CopyrightDirective will censor the internet,”Footnote 82 or widely shared a tweet of the Palais de l’Élysée stating that “[c]opyright is not censorship, it is freedom of creation and diversity of information!”Footnote 83 . This delegitimization strategy is also reflected in the attempts of rightsholders and creatives in French to push astroturfing, lobbying, and misinformation frames (figure 7). While the latter group of frames was pushed rather infrequently, they nonetheless stuck with the media, especially newspapers (figure 5).

In French, rightsholders and creatives were not only successful in delegitimizing the anti-copyright groups but also in pushing their own frames. Rightsholders and creatives unified around the fair pay & creator rights frame and pushed it frequently in French (figure 7). Coupled with a favorable bonding surface for the frame, it is unsurprising that it was successful in newspapers and on Twitter (figure 5). Although rightsholders and creatives unified around the fair pay & creator rights frame also in German (figure 7), it was not as frequently pushed, the bonding surface was less favorable than in France, and the pro-copyright coalition was delegitimized. Thus, the frame stuck considerably worse than in French media (figure 5).

To sum up this section, I find that in France the pro-copyright frames fell on fertile soil because of a skeptical position toward tech in the public and media and a creative sector characterized by individuals and SMEs made for a good bonding surface. Further, it enabled the pro-copyright coalition to delegitimize the anti-copyright coalition. In Germany, a less tech critical media debate, the belief that pre-EUCD regulation is sufficient, and the concentration of firms in the creative sector, notably of publishers, created a bonding surface for censorship frames and the delegitimization of the pro-copyright coalition. In the next part, I will trace how MEPs responded to the signals sent by these different frames.

Outcome: policymakers respond to signaling

Cross-language differences in the framing of the debates are largely reflected in the voting behavior of MEPs on the EUCD on March 26, 2019. Three groups of countries can be distinguished. First, countries where strong support for the directive transcends party lines. More than 80 percent of French MEPs voted in favor and significantly tweeted more pro-copyright after the March blackouts (figures 4&8). In the parliamentary debate, they mirrored the delegitimization frames toward the anti-copyright coalition as did the CDU/CSU MEPs and the commission. They disregarded demonstrations and concerns of the public as the result of a misinformation campaignFootnote 84 , alleged platforms to buy demonstratorsFootnote 85 , or to “have bombarded [MEPs] like vulgar cultural intellectual political prisoners”Footnote 86 . In addition to French MEPs, also Belgian and Portuguese MEPs voted largely in favor of the EUCD (figure 8) reflecting the framing of the debate in their languages. In Spanish, where the framing was mixed and salience was low, MEPs also largely voted in favor of the EUCD. This suggests that MEPs did not respond to the public amid low politicization of the issue. Second, in countries where framing in newspapers was mixed and salience was high (Italian, English/UK), MEPs votes differed along partisan lines. Third, MEPs from Poland, the Netherlands, Austria, and Germany largely voted against the reform (figure 8). In all these countries, except for Poland, the framing of the debate was strongly anti-copyright after platforms’ outside lobbying. Among German-tweeting MEPs, the March 2019 blackouts significantly increased the relative frequency of anti-copyright frames (figure 4), and EUCD opponents referred to public protests to justify their positionFootnote 87 . In Germany, legislators from the CDU/CSU are the exception as they largely voted in favor of the reform justifying their votes by delegitimizing the anti-copyright coalition (see above and figure 8)Footnote 88 .

Figure 8. Percentage of MEP votes in favor of the EUCD by Country and Party Group.

Source: Own compilation based on data provided by pledge2019.eu.

Notes: Black vertical line indicates average by party group.

Still, the alignment of MEPs voting behavior with the framing of the EUCD in their home countries becomes evident, showing that MEPs are generally responsive to the signal of media reporting.

Discussion and Conclusion

This paper analyzes the European Copyright Directive (EUCD) to uncover the scope conditions of successful platform outside lobbying. In the policy area of copyright, existing accounts of platform power predict an alignment of preferences between consumers and platforms that makes vote-seeking politicians shy away from regulation. I argue that a series of recent Big Tech scandals—the so-called techlash—challenges this structural account of platform power. Instead, platforms need to actively create such a coalition against unfavorable public opinion. While platforms are structurally advantaged to pursue outside lobbying campaigns, their success depends on the stickiness of the frames they and their opponents push. Comparing the French and German debates, I find that pro-copyright frames and frames that delegitimize platforms stuck better in France, while anti-copyright frames stuck better in Germany. I attribute this to initial differences in the perceptibility of the targeted audience, namely differences in public opinion, media coverage of Big Tech, and different degrees of concentration of the countries’ creative economy. These differences in the bonding surface enabled competing interest groups to make their framing stick. Pro-copyright groups arguing for fair remuneration and criticizing the exploitation of artists by platforms succeeded in French where the creative sector consists mainly of SMEs and individual artists. In German, a less pronounced techlash and a concentrated media sector enabled platform frames that criticized censorship and big media to stick leading to a strong outside signal to German-speaking MEPs. Thus, the stickiness of frames, i.e., the perceptibility of the target audience and characteristics of competing interest groups, is an important scope conditions for successful platform outside lobbying.

I make two contributions to the lobbying and business power literatures. First, I show that the techlash substantially changed the dynamics of platform power by undermining the structural consumer-platform coalition. Instead, platforms have to actively create coalitions against regulation by using outside lobbying tactics. I identify frame stickiness as a key scope condition for platform outside lobbying. Second, my findings show that insulated debates on structural and instrumental (platform) power can be fruitfully overcome by highlighting how certain business models and sectoral characteristics (dis)enable lobbying strategies. On the one hand, platforms are uniquely positioned to mobilize the public because of their ownership of digital infrastructure and their intermediary position. On the other hand, platforms’ exploitative business practices are particularly vulnerable to delegitimization strategies by competing interest groups—especially amid the techlash. Crucially, both contributions show that initial claims of the political power of platforms were exaggerated, at least in the area of copyright.

Finally, I propose a novel mixed-methods design that exploits the complementary strengths of process-tracing and time-series analysis of textual data. Combining these methods increases the robustness of time-series analysis by theorizing a process and adding context to findings of temporal precedence. Process tracing is enhanced by the addition of time-series analysis when the mechanism involves many entities and its parts cannot be comprehensively operationalized with qualitative data.

Despite these contributions my study also has weaknesses that future research should address.

First, I do not explain why the EUCD passed. This is largely due to my research goal and design. My goal is to explain under which conditions platform outside lobbying is successful. Therefore, I focus on collecting within-case evidence on whether the proposed mechanism of conflict expansion and signaling worked and if not, why it failed. While I believe I have identified the reasons why platforms were unable to (re)frame the debate across the EU and send a strong signal of public unease to MEPs from all countries, my study does not fully explain why the EUCD passed. As the CDU/CSU illustrates, party politics and inside lobbying by rightsholders played a substantial role. Moreover, I do not control for every factor that might result in differences between German- and French-speaking countries and the votes of their MEPs. However, given the substantial differences across the ideological spectrum of the MEPs and their clear references to the respective framing in the public debate to justify their voting decisions, I believe that I have gathered sufficient evidence to be confident about the scope conditions of successful platform outside lobbying. Nevertheless, there are many of opportunities for further research to investigate non-outside lobbying explanations for the passage of the EUCD.

Second, although I show that the techlash undermined the structural platform-consumer coalition, public opinion toward Big Tech fluctuates not only between different countries but also over time. While we might be in an era of “tech-dystopianism,” the Covid pandemic illustrated that “tech-utopianism” and the belief that technology can better our lives are not deadFootnote 89 . Initial public opinion toward Big Tech should thus be considered as a variable, not a constant and should be included in any study of platform power.

Third, in my comparison of the German and French debates, I largely neglect possible interactions between the debates. While research on the nonexistence of a European public sphere suggests that interactions between languages are limitedFootnote 90 , the reference of CDU/CSU politicians to delegitimization frames, which were mainly pushed in the French context, suggests that further studies should analyze outside lobbying and framing while explicitly theorizing multilevel dynamics and spillovers between countries. Framing in one country could reinforce or limit framing/outside lobbying success in other countries.

Fourth, I study platform outside lobbying in a case that is primarily a lobbying battle between different firms in a policy area that is likely to show an alignment of initial preferences between platforms and consumers. This is a case where we should expect platform outside lobbying to be successful. But it failed. In policy areas where an alignment of preferences is less likely, and where lobbying battles are between platforms and civil society (e.g., data privacy) delegitimization strategies and the stickiness of anti-platform frames should be even more pronounced. The relative absence of platform outside lobbying against the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Digital Markets Act suggest that platforms adapt their lobbying strategies to the strategic context of the policy issue. Future research should therefore examine how platforms adapt their lobbying strategies to policy areas.

Fifth, platform lobbying does not end with the adoption of the EUCD. It requires implementation into national law, which creates opportunities for platforms to water down the directive. Indeed, implementation has been slow in many member states, and analyzing differences in the stringency of national legislation provides an interesting opportunity for comparative studies. Further, having lost the legislative battle, platforms may try to obstruct enforcement as they did in the case of the GDPRFootnote 91 .

Finally, I have largely focused on the mobilization of the public. However, the mobilization of YouTube creators against the EUCD suggests that platform-dependent entrepreneurs are important in amplifying platform messages. Thus, future studies should investigate how platform-dependent entrepreneurs feature in the lobbying strategies of platforms.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/bap.2024.25

Data availability statement

Supplementary material for this paper includes an online appendix with a detailed description of the data gathering process, validation of the dictionary, descriptive data on the salience and framing in some EU languages, and full regression results. Replication data and scripts can be accessed online in the Harvard Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/3CM39M.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Christine Trampusch and Hanna Doose for her helpful comments and suggestions on the draft and Jana Diewald for her indispensable research assistance in validating the dictionary. I would also like to thank the participants of the “(Online) lobbying and politicization: interest groups’ successful adaptation of communication?” panel at the 2021 ECPR General Conference and the “Political Communication and Policymaking in the Age of Digital Media” workshop at the 2023 ECPR Joint Sessions.

Competing interests

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Footnotes

2 Culpepper and Thelen (Reference Culpepper and Thelen2020).

3 Weiss-Blatt (Reference Weiss-Blatt2021).

4 Culpepper and Thelen (Reference Culpepper and Thelen2020); Kemmerling and Trampusch (Reference Kemmerling and Trampusch2023).

5 Srnicek (Reference Srnicek2017, 43).

6 Kenney, Bearson, and Zysman (Reference Kenney, Bearson and Zysman2021); Srnicek (Reference Srnicek2017).

7 E.g. Srnicek (Reference Srnicek2017).

9 Kenney, Bearson, and Zysman (Reference Kenney, Bearson and Zysman2021); Culpepper and Thelen (Reference Culpepper and Thelen2020).

10 Kenney, Bearson, and Zysman (Reference Kenney, Bearson and Zysman2021).

11 Culpepper and Thelen (Reference Culpepper and Thelen2020, 290 & 293).

14 Culpepper and Thelen (Reference Culpepper and Thelen2020).

15 Except for: Seidl (Reference Seidl2020).

17 Weiss-Blatt (Reference Weiss-Blatt2021).

18 Weiss-Blatt (Reference Weiss-Blatt2021).

19 Culpepper (Reference Culpepper2010, 197)

20 Kollman (Reference Kollman1998, 3).

21 Kollman (Reference Kollman1998), Ch. 5.

22 Kollman (Reference Kollman1998, 103–104).

23 Entman (Reference Entman1993, 52).

24 e.g. De Bruycker (Reference De Bruycker2017).

25 Chong and Druckman (Reference Chong and Druckman2010, 116).

26 Baumgartner, De Boef, and Boydstun (Reference Baumgartner, De Boef and Boydstun2008, 20); see also: Binderkrantz (Reference Binderkrantz2020a).

27 Chong and Druckman (Reference Chong and Druckman2010)

28 Baumgartner and Mahoney (Reference Baumgartner and Mahoney2008)

29 Junk and Rasmussen (Reference Junk and Rasmussen2019); Binderkrantz (Reference Binderkrantz2020b).

30 e.g. Baumgartner and Mahoney (Reference Baumgartner and Mahoney2008).

31 Chong and Druckman (Reference Chong and Druckman2010).

32 Baumgartner and Mahoney (Reference Baumgartner and Mahoney2008)

33 Kollman (Reference Kollman1998), Ch. 3.

35 De Bruycker and Beyers (Reference De Bruycker and Beyers2019).

36 De Bruycker and Beyers (Reference De Bruycker and Beyers2019).

37 Phinney (Reference Phinney2017); De Bruycker and Beyers (Reference De Bruycker and Beyers2019); see also Seidl (Reference Seidl2020) for a study on platforms.

39 Kollman (Reference Kollman1998).

40 Culpepper (Reference Culpepper2010); Dür and Mateo (Reference Dür and Mateo2023).

41 Dür and Mateo (Reference Dür and Mateo2013); Kollman (Reference Kollman1998, 41).

42 Dür and Mateo (Reference Dür and Mateo2013, 663–664).

43 Bouwen (Reference Bouwen2004); Dür and Mateo (Reference Dür and Mateo2013).

44 Dür and Matteo (Reference Dür and Mateo2013) .

46 Srnicek (Reference Srnicek2017, 48).

47 Sell (Reference Sell2013); Kemmerling (Reference Kemmerling2023, Ch. 4).

48 Beach and Pedersen (Reference Beach and Pedersen2013).

49 Footnote Ibid. Ch.5 & Ch. 6.

50 cf. Footnote ibid. (99).

51 Beach and Brun Pedersen (Reference Beach and Brun Pedersen2018).

52 Newspapers from other EU countries are not included in NexisUni or Factiva.

53 I only scraped data that was publicly accessible respected robot.txt files.

54 Grimmer and Stewart (Reference Grimmer and Stewart2013).

55 Footnote Ibid. (274).

57 Grimmer and Stewart (Reference Grimmer and Stewart2013, 275).

58 Fokianos and Fried (Reference Fokianos and Fried2010).

59 Footnote Ibid.; For the ad campaign I chose a depreciation factor of 0.85, because it was sustained over a longer period.

61 Haggart (Reference Haggart2014).

62 Corporate Europe Observatory (2018).

63 Corporate Europe Observatory (2018).

64 Haggart (Reference Haggart2014).

65 Dobusch and Quack (Reference Dobusch and Quack2013); Sell (Reference Sell2013).

66 Corporate Europe Observatory (2018).

67 Eurostat

68 Change.org (2018); Garrahan and Khan (Reference Garrahan and Khan2018); Lauchlan (Reference Lauchlan2018); LeFloid (2018).

69 Wikimedia (2022).

70 D’Onfro (Reference D’Onfro2018).

71 Twitch (2018).

72 Alexander (Reference Alexander2018).

73 Vincent (Reference Vincent2019).

74 Al-Youssef (Reference Al-Youssef2019).

75 dw.com. (2019).

76 For a full list of search terms see appendix A4.

77 Eurostat (cult&num)

78 Eurostat (cult&num)

79 Corporate Europe Observatory (2018).

80 E.g. Savetheinternet.io (tweet id: 1096369382509473792, 1098184223414984704), Wikimedia Deutschland (tweet id: 1010843855225270272), see also: Corporate Europe

81 IMPALA (Tweet id: 1039792463886671873); European Federation of Journalists (Tweet id: 1039777894904602625); Syndicat National de l’Edition (Tweet id: 1039780407460409345)

82 E.g. Groupement Européen des Sociétés d’Auteurs (Tweet id: 1103219676388167682)

83 E.g. ADAMI (Tweet id: 1110197758827397121)

85 Caspary in: Merholz and Kain (Reference Merholz and Kain2019).

86 Cavada in: European Parliament (2019).

87 e.g. Reda, Guoga, Sośnierz, Wölken, Maštálka in: European Parliament (2019).

88 See also: Heermann (Reference Heermann2023).

89 Weiss-Blatt (Reference Weiss-Blatt2021).

90 Rivas-de-Roca and García-Gordillo (Reference Rivas-de-Roca and García-Gordillo2022).

91 Goujard (Reference Goujard2023).

References

Alexander, Julia. 2018. “YouTube Now Runs Pop-Ups on Videos That Warn Users of EU Copyright Proposal.” The Verge. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.theverge.com/2018/11/20/18104535/yotuube-pop-up-article-13-copyright-european-union-eu-warning Google Scholar
Al-Youssef, Muzayen. 2019. “Tausende Demonstrieren Gegen Uploadfilter in Wien.” Der Standard. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.derstandard.at/consent/tcf/story/2000100095825/hunderte-demonstrieren-gegen-uploadfilter-in-wien Google Scholar
Baumgartner, Frank R., and Mahoney, Christine. 2008. “Forum Section: The Two Faces of Framing: Individual-Level Framing and Collective Issue Definition in the European Union.” European Union Politics 9: 435449.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumgartner, Frank R., De Boef, Suzanna L., and Boydstun, Amber E.. 2008. The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beach, Derek, and Brun Pedersen, Rasmus. 2018. “Selecting Appropriate Cases When Tracing Causal Mechanisms.” Sociological Methods & Research 47: 837871.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beach, Derek, and Pedersen, Rasmus. 2013. Process-Tracing Methods: Foundations and Guidelines. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binderkrantz, Anne Skorkjær. 2020a. “Interest Group Representation and Framing in the Media: A Policy Area Perspective.” Journal of Public Affairs 20: e2009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binderkrantz, Anne Skorkjær. 2020b. “Interest Group Framing in Denmark and the UK: Membership Representation or Public Appeal?Journal of European Public Policy 27: 569589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouwen, Pieter. 2004. “Exchanging Access Goods for Access: A Comparative Study of Business Lobbying in the European Union Institutions.” European Journal of Political Research 43: 337369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Change.org. 2018. “Stop the Censorship-Machinery! Save the Internet!” Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.change.org/p/european-parliament-stop-the-censorship-machinery-save-the-internet?redirect=false Google Scholar
Chong, Dennis, and Druckman, James N.. 2010. “Dynamic Public Opinion: Communication Effects over Time.” American Political Science Review 104: 663680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corporate Europe Observatory. 2018. “Copyright Directive: How Competing Big Business Lobbies Drowned out Critical Voices” Accessed 09 June 2023, https://corporateeurope.org/en/2018/12/copyright-directive-how-competing-big-business-lobbies-drowned-out-critical-voices Google Scholar
Culpepper, Pepper D. 2010. Quiet Politics and Business Power: Corporate Control in Europe and Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culpepper, Pepper D., and Thelen, Kathleen. 2020. “Are We All Amazon Primed? Consumers and the Politics of Platform Power.” Comparative Political Studies 53: 288318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D’Onfro, Jillian. 2018. “YouTube CEO Urges YouTube Creators to Protest European Copyright Law.” CNBC. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/22/youtube-susan-wojcicki-creators-protest-eu-article-13-copyright-law.html Google Scholar
De Bruycker, Iskander, and Beyers, Jan. 2019. “Lobbying Strategies and Success: Inside and Outside Lobbying in European Union Legislative Politics.” European Political Science Review 11: 5774.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Bruycker, Iskander. 2017. “Framing and Advocacy: A Research Agenda for Interest Group Studies.” Journal of European Public Policy 24: 775787.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobusch, Leonhard, and Quack, Sigrid. 2013. “Framing Standards, Mobilizing Users: Copyright versus Fair Use in Transnational Regulation.” Review of International Political Economy 20: 5288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dür, Andreas, and Mateo, Gemma. 2013. “Gaining Access or Going Public? Interest Group Strategies in Five European Countries: Gaining Access or Going Public?European Journal of Political Research 52: 660686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dür, Andreas, and Mateo, Gemma. 2023. “Lobbying in the Face of Politicisation: Interest Group Strategies in Trade Policy.” Journal of European Public Policy 31: 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
dw.com. 2019. “Europe-Wide Protests over EU Copyright Reform.” Deutsche Welle. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.dw.com/en/eu-copyright-bill-protests-across-europe-highlight-rifts-over-reform-plans/a-48037133 Google Scholar
Entman, Robert M. 1993. “Framing: Toward Clarification of a Fractured Paradigm.” Journal of Communication 43: 5158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
European Parliament. 2019. “Copyright in the Digital Single Market (Debate)”. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/CRE-8-2019-03-26-ITM-002_EN.html Google Scholar
Fokianos, Konstantinos, and Fried, Roland. 2010. “Interventions in INGARCH Processes.” Journal of Time Series Analysis 31: 210225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrahan, Matthew, and Khan, Mehreen. 2018. “Google Criticised for Push against EU Copyright Reform”. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.ft.com/content/a8031d7a-78a0-11e8-bc55-50daf11b720d Google Scholar
Goujard, Clothilde. 2023. “Brussels Sets out to Fix the GDPR.” POLITICO.. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.politico.eu/article/brussels-plans-new-privacy-enforcement-law-by-summer/ Google Scholar
Griffin, Andrew. 2019. “EU Removes ‘offensive’ Blog Post Attacking Internet Campaigners against New Copyright Rules.” The Independent.Google Scholar
Grimmer, Justin, and Stewart, Brandon M.. 2013. “Text as Data: The Promise and Pitfalls of Automatic Content Analysis Methods for Political Texts.” Political Analysis 21: 267297.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haggart, Blayne. 2014. Copyfight: The Global Politics of Digital Copyright Reform. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heermann, Max. 2023. “Undermining Lobbying Coalitions: The Interest Group Politics of EU Copyright Reform.” Journal of European Public Policy: 129.Google Scholar
Junk, Wiebke Marie, and Rasmussen, Anne. 2019. “Framing by the Flock: Collective Issue Definition and Advocacy Success.” Comparative Political Studies 52: 483513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Junk, Wiebke Marie. 2019. “When Diversity Works: The Effects of Coalition Composition on the Success of Lobbying Coalitions.” American Journal of Political Science 63: 660674.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, Eileen. 2018. “Noisy Business Politics: Lobbying Strategies and Business Influence after the Financial Crisis.” Journal of European Public Policy 25: 287306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kemmerling, Michael, and Trampusch, Christine. 2023. “Digital Power Resources (DPR): The Political Economy of Structural and Infrastructural Business Power in Digital(Ized) Capitalism.” Socio-Economic Review 21: 18511876.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kemmerling, Michael. 2023. Business Power in Digital Capitalism. Dissertation, University of Cologne.Google Scholar
Kenney, Martin, Bearson, Dafna, and Zysman, John. 2021. “The Platform Economy Matures: Pervasive Power, Private Regulation, and Dependent Entrepreneurs.” Socio-Economic Review. Early View.Google Scholar
Kollman, Ken. 1998. Outside Lobbying: Public Opinion and Interest Group Strategies. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lauchlan, Stuart. 2018. “EU Backs Berners-Lee over Paul McCartney as Copyright Directive Is Voted Down.” Diginomica.Google Scholar
LeFloid. 2018. “WEHRT EUCH! Stoppt Artikel 13! Heute!” Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGHMwgIpdEE Google Scholar
Merholz, Anne, and Kain, Florian. 2019. “Deutscher Abgeordneter Bekam Morddrohungen.” Bild. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.bild.de/politik/ausland/politik-inland/upload-filter-im-europarlament-abgeordneter-bekommt-morddrohung-60746158.bild.html Google Scholar
Newman, Abraham L. 2020. “Digital Policy-Making in the European Union.” In Policy-Making in the European Union. Ed. Wallace, Helen, Pollack, Mark, Roederer-Rynning, Christilla, and Young, Alasdair. 15. 8th ed. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Phinney, Robin. 2017. Strange Bedfellows: Interest Group Coalitions, Diverse Partners, and Influence in American Social Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proksch, Sven-Oliver, Lowe, Will, Wäckerle, Jens, and Soroka, Stuart. 2019. “Multilingual Sentiment Analysis: A New Approach to Measuring Conflict in Legislative Speeches: Multilingual Sentiment Analysis.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 44: 97131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivas-de-Roca, Rubén, and García-Gordillo, Mar. 2022. “Understanding the European Public Sphere: A Review of Pending Challenges in Research.” European Politics and Society 23: 380394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seidl, Timo. 2020. “The Politics of Platform Capitalism. A Case Study on the Regulation of Uber in New York.” Regulation & Governance, 16: 357374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sell, Susan K. 2003. Private Power, Public Law: The Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sell, Susan K. 2013. “Revenge of the ‘Nerds’: Collective Action against Intellectual Property Maximalism in the Global Information Age.” International Studies Review 15: 6785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Srnicek, Nick. 2017. Platform Capitalism. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Thelen, Kathleen. 2018. “Regulating Uber: The Politics of the Platform Economy in Europe and the United States.” Perspectives on Politics 16: 938953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Twitch. 2018. “From Our CEO: A Letter to Twitch Creators about Article 13.” Medium. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://blog.twitch.tv/en/2018/12/05/from-our-ceo-a-letter-to-twitch-creators-about-article-13-16ae8ec41c70/ Google Scholar
Vincent, James. 2019. “European Wikipedias Have Been Turned off for the Day to Protest Dangerous Copyright Laws.” The Verge. Accessed 09 June 2023, https://www.theverge.com/2019/3/21/18275462/eu-copyright-directive-protest-wikipedia-twitch-pornhub-final-vote Google Scholar
Voss, Axel. 2018. “Stellungnahme Zur Reform Des Urheberrechts” Accessed 09 June 2023,Google Scholar
Weiss-Blatt, Nirit. 2021. The Techlash and Tech Crisis Communication. Leeds: Emerald Publishing Limited.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wikimedia. 2022. “Wikipedia Blackout against the EU Copyright Directive Proposal, 4-5 July 2018” Accessed 09 June 2023, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Wikipedia_blackout_against_the_EU_copyright_directive_proposal,_4-5_July_2018 Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Summary of the platform outside lobbying mechanism.

Figure 1

Table 1: Frames used in the debate on the EUCD

Figure 2

Figure 2. Salience of EUCD in newspaper articles and tweets.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Net relative frame frequency in newspaper articles and tweets on EUCD.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Results of VAR intervention analysis on relative framing of EUCD. Note: Only languages where at least one platform intervention was significant are displayed. Full results in appendix.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Framing of EUCD in French and German newspaper articles and tweets.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Salience of techlash in newspapers.Note: Data on Portuguese, Maltese, and Belgian French-language newspapers is only available from 2015 and not included. “Other languages” refers to English, Spanish, Polish, Italian, and Dutch.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Relative frequency of frames pushed by interest group type.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Percentage of MEP votes in favor of the EUCD by Country and Party Group.Source: Own compilation based on data provided by pledge2019.eu.Notes: Black vertical line indicates average by party group.

Supplementary material: File

Kemmerling supplementary material

Kemmerling supplementary material
Download Kemmerling supplementary material(File)
File 1.8 MB