How to Regulate Disruptive Innovation
The digital economy requires a legal environment fit for the future. As emerging technologies create new business models, there grows a pressing need for creating, modifying and enforcing regulations. Yet, the challenge is finding a delicate balance between protecting public interests and allowing the innovation to flourish.
Germany’s BDI[1] and Noerr LLP, a leading European law firm, presented a survey on the digital transformation of the economy and published a legal opinion. The very reason of preparing this opinion paper was summarized in the report: “Business is going digital – do the legal framework conditions also need to “go digital”? Do laws in Germany have a negative impact on the development and use of digital innovations, applications and business models? Questions such as these place legal experts at the heart of the public discussion. This publication is intended to promote a legal discourse involving business, policy-makers and academia in equal measure. The aim of this discussion must be to shape a competitive legislative framework for the industry of the future.”
The outcome of the BDI’s survey, which was well compiled in the opinion prepared by Noerr, may be expanded to all sectors and markets, as the challenge as to how the regulatory framework must be drawn reaches beyond EU and beyond all national borders. The result of the survey of BDI and Noerr suggests that, “German economy requires a uniform and future-oriented European legal environment in order to successfully develop new digital innovations, applications and business models.”[2]
We are going through such interesting times. Technological innovations shape the dynamics of the businesses and have already started to change the way we live. New technologies give rise to new and unique challenges. These are spearheaded by the issue of regulation, the challenge for law to keep up with technological evolution. As governments, policymakers and regulators try hard to cope with the regulatory challenges posed by digital technologies, four foundational questions are critical to address:
- What’s the current state of regulation in the area?
- What’s the right time to regulate?
- What’s the right approach to regulation?
- What has changed since regulations were first enacted?