“…The parameters of ‘development’, it is assumed, are best understood by elite corporate actors who are to be left untouched by the stifling tyranny of regulation. This myth rests on a number of discursive planks of corporate hegemony: ‘Internet exceptionalism’, which holds that the distributed, decentralized and democratic character of the global Internet will be thwarted by any conventional multilateral approach to its governance (Chenou 2014 ); ‘free global data flows’, which considers any effort to regulate cross-border flows of data as a potentially fatal blow to informational freedoms on the Internet-mediated global public sphere (Gurumurthy et al 2017 ); ‘the global community of users’, which reframes market interests as freedom, flexibility, convenience and even collaboration, sharing and solidarity for the Internet users of the world (Ritzer and Jurgenson 2010 ); and ‘data for development’, which views data extractivist strategies as the magic bullet for development pathways in the digital economy (Gurumurthy and Chami 2019 ).…”