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Publication : “Does Privacy Regulation Harm Content Providers? A Longitudinal Analysis of the Impact of the GDPR.” - Département DEFI Data analytics, Économie et Finances

Publication : “Does Privacy Regulation Harm Content Providers? A Longitudinal Analysis of the Impact of the GDPR.”

Date de publication
21 août 2025
Catégories
dans
Auteur
par Philippe Castelnau

DEFI a le plaisir de vous annoncer que notre collègue Vincent Lefrère (IMT-BS), maître de conférences, vient d’avoir l’acceptation de publication pour son article :

Abstract : lien

Concerns that the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) would adversely affect the ability of news and media websites to create new quality content have not been thoroughly investigated in the literature. We construct a longitudinal data set of European Union (EU) and U.S. news and media websites to study how online content providers responded to the GDPR over time and whether potential restrictions on online tracking enforced by the regulation affected their downstream outcomes. We find robust evidence that both EU and U.S. news and media websites responded to the regulation by altering their data collection practices, but did so differently, with EU websites reducing tracking and implementing consent mechanisms at higher rates than their U.S. counterparts. Although we detect a reduction in average page views per user on EU relative to U.S. websites, we do not find evidence of negative impacts, in both the short and long term, on EU websites’ provision of new content or on several proxies for quality of that content, such as social media engagement metrics, various traffic measures, and articles’ text analytics. We also find no evidence of differences in survival rates across EU and U.S. news and media websites, and no evidence that monetization strategies changed at higher rates on EU relative to U.S. websites. The analysis suggests that EU online content providers did implement changes to their data collection practices in response to the GDPR but were able to use data minimization and consent mechanism strategies that allowed them to keep producing content and engage audiences at degrees on par with their U.S. counterparts.

L’article est co-écrit avec

  • Warberg, L. (Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University),
  • Cheyre, C. (Information Science Department, Cornell Bowers CIS, Cornell University),
  • Marotta, V. (Independent Researcher), &
  • Acquisti, A. (Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology).

Published Online : 11 Jul 2025.