This post features my latest reading suggestions based on the academic papers and press articles that I enjoyed reading in May 2022. As I tend to favor the active sharing of open-source publications, you can follow me on Twitter (@ProfSchrepel) or LinkedIn (here) to access similar articles on a more regular basis.
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Antitrust:
- Competition Stories: March & April 2022 (Makis Komninos — Network Law Review)
- The Slogans and Goals of Antitrust Law (Herbert Hovenkamp)
- Replacing the Structural Presumption (Louis Kaplow – Harvard Law School John M. Olin Center Discussion Paper)
- Antitrust and High-Tech: A Tale of Two Mergers (Babette Boliek – Emory Law Journal)
- Antitrust Has Forgotten its Coase (John M. Yun – Nevada Law Journal)
- Invoking Privacy to Justify Abusive Conduct under Article 102 TFEU (Selcukhan Unekbas)
- Data and Market Power (Jan Eeckhout & Laura Veldkamp – NBER)
- Complexity Books for Antitrust Lawyers (Steven J. Cernak – Antitrust Attorney Blog)
Blockchain:
- Introducing the 2022 State of Crypto Report (Matsuoka, Lazzarin, Dixon & Hackett – a16z)
- Cryptoeconomics (Tyler Cowen & Alex Tabarrok)
- Twitter’s decentralized, open-source offshoot just released its first code (Adi Robertson – The Verge)
- Web3 Will Run on Cryptocurrency (Ramsey Khabbaz – Harvard Business Review)
- Aave Launches Decentralized, NFT-Based Twitter Rival on Polygon (Andrew Hayward – Decrypt)
- The Future of Crypto Native Consumer Products (Mercedes Bent – Medium)
Artificial Intelligence:
- A proposal to improve the European AI Act (Thibault Schrepel – Network Law Review) 🎥
- Report on artificial intelligence in a digital age (European Parliament)
- The Problem with Blaming Robots for Taking Our Jobs (Jane Hu – New Yorker)
Digital Law:
- Law + Technology (Thibault Schrepel – Stanford University CodeX Research Paper Series 2022)
- GDPR and the Lost Generation of Innovative Apps (Janßen, Kesler, Kummer & Waldfogel – NBER)
- Privacy Pretexts (Rory Van Loo – Cornell Law Review)
- Defending Innovation Against Attacks from All Sides (Adam Thierer – Discourse)
- Misinformation Is a Threat Because (Other) People are Gullible (Sacha Altay & Alberto Acerbi)
Other:
- The Policy Implications of Economic Complexity (César A. Hidalgo)
- The War on Economics (Idrees Kahloon – New Yorker)
- Cogs, Monsters, and Better Economics (Diane Coyle & Russ Roberts – Econtalk) 🎙
Thibault Schrepel
@ProfSchrepel