Meta, TikTok and YouTube may finally have to start sharing data with researchers
by Casey Newton from The Verge - All Posts on (#5YXCG)
Sen. Chris Coons, who led Wednesday's hearing on tech transparency, during a previous hearing in March. | Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images
On Wednesday, Congress was treated to the unfamiliar spectacle of highly intelligent people, talking with nuance, about platform regulation. The occasion was a hearing, titled Platform Transparency: Understanding the Impact of Social Media," and it served as a chance for members of the Senate Judiciary Committee to consider the necessity of legislation that would require big tech platforms to make themselves available for study by qualified researchers and members of the public.
One such piece of legislation, the Platform Transparency and Accountability Act, was introduced in December by (an ever-so-slightly) bipartisan group of senators. One of those senators, Chris Coons of Delaware, led the Wednesday hearing; another, Sen. Amy...