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The platform economy has experienced rapid growth, disrupting traditional business models and contributing significantly to the global economy. [2] Platform businesses are characterized by their reliance on network effects, where the platform's value increases as more users join. This has allowed many platform companies to scale quickly and ...
This model of capitalism has emerged and expanded with the rise of the Internet and digital technologies, transforming various sectors of the economy from retail and transportation to media and labor markets. [1] [2] Four main facets of platform capitalism are: crowdsourcing, sharing economy, gig economy and platform economy.
A key issue in the economics of digitization is the economic value of Internet-based services. The motivation for this question is two-fold. First, economists are interested in understanding digitization related policies such as network infrastructure investment and subsidies for Internet access.
The platform provider, who is usually the platform sponsor, serves as the contact point for all users of the digital platform ecosystem, providing the platform's core technologies. The interactions among the actors in digital platform ecosystems result in co-created value through various digital algorithms, [14] enabling the platform to quickly ...
The digital economy is a portmanteau of digital computing and economy, and is an umbrella term that describes how traditional brick-and-mortar economic activities (production, distribution, trade) are being transformed by the Internet and World Wide Web technologies.
The Platform Canvas is a conceptual framework designed to explain the mechanisms of multi-sided platform organizations, and how they create, capture, and deliver value in the platform economy. [1] Multi-sided platforms, also called two-sided markets , like Amazon , Uber and Airbnb , create value primarily by facilitating direct interactions ...
The network economy is the emerging economic order within the information society. The name stems from a key attribute - products and services are created and value is added through social networks operating on large or global scales.
Algorithmic management is a term used to describe certain labor management practices in the contemporary digital economy. In scholarly uses, the term was initially coined in 2015 by Min Kyung Lee, Daniel Kusbit, Evan Metsky, and Laura Dabbish to describe the managerial role played by algorithms on the Uber and Lyft platforms, [1] [2] but has since been taken up by other scholars to describe ...