“…The introduction of intermediating platforms became necessary with the emergence of Web 2.0 where the sharing, exchange and transaction of user-generated content among dispersed peers of a network had to be organized, rationalized, aggregated and coordinated . This centralized intermediation introduces new issues as it necessarily requires some form of surveillance, inspection, filtering and censorship (more generally, control) of the data and content transmitted over the infrastructure (Deibert el al., 2010;Fuchs, 2011Fuchs, & 2013Gillespie, 2010 andNieborg and Poell, 2018;Srnicek, 2017;van Dijck, 2013;van Dijck et al, 2018;Zittrain and Palfrey, 2008;Zuboff, 2019). Both the economic literature on two-sided platforms Tirole, 2003,2006;Evans and Schmalensee, 2005) and the managerial literature on business ecosystems (Adner, 2017;Baldwin, 2012;Gawer, 2009a;Gawer and Henderson, 2007;Gulati et al, 2012;Jacobides et al 2018;Kapoor and Agarwal 2017;Thomas et al, 2014) mainly belong to this second interpretation of platform, conceived as a focal hub or intermediary that exercises some central organizing or coordinating function over the wider networked system.…”