Giuseppe Colangelo (Università degli Studi della Basilicata) has posted “Is AI the End of the DMA as we Know It?” on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
The disruptive potential of AI-enabled applications for competitive dynamics and the core organisational forms of digital intermediation inevitably also has significant implications for the recent regulatory initiatives adopted to govern digital markets. Indeed, because these instruments were conceived without AI specifically in view, they risk becoming outdated within a very short period of time. Notably, while they have been shaped by a Big Tech-centred conception of digital markets, the possible emergence of new gatekeepers in the age of AI marks a turning point that calls into question the very rationale and foundations of these regimes in their present form. As a result, only a few years after its enactment, the role of the DMA, together with its rationale and claimed future-proof character, is already under scrutiny, as the deployment of AI applications raises the question whether policymakers should reopen the legislative framework in order to amend the Regulation. Against this background and in the context of the first review of the DMA, the paper argues that the rise of AI applications calls for a reconsideration of the DMA’s overall architecture and for the development of a distinct competition policy framework, rather than for a merely incremental fine-tuning exercise.
