
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of Diritto al Digitale, Giulio Coraggio, technology and data lawyer at DLA Piper, explores a landmark US decision that found Meta and Google liable for the design of their platforms—not for the content they host.
Giulio Coraggio analyses how this case reshapes platform liability, introducing the concept of design liability and redefining legal risk for social media and AI-driven systems. The episode examines the implications under EU law, including the Digital Services Act (DSA), AI Act, and GDPR, and explains how features such as algorithmic recommendations, infinite scroll, and autoplay may now become legally relevant.
A must-listen for legal professionals and companies navigating digital regulation, this episode provides a structured and practical analysis of how litigation may drive regulatory change—and why platform design is becoming a core compliance issue.
Send us Fan Mail
📌 You can find our contacts 👉 www.dlapiper.com
By DLA Piper Law FirmIn this episode of Diritto al Digitale, Giulio Coraggio, technology and data lawyer at DLA Piper, explores a landmark US decision that found Meta and Google liable for the design of their platforms—not for the content they host.
Giulio Coraggio analyses how this case reshapes platform liability, introducing the concept of design liability and redefining legal risk for social media and AI-driven systems. The episode examines the implications under EU law, including the Digital Services Act (DSA), AI Act, and GDPR, and explains how features such as algorithmic recommendations, infinite scroll, and autoplay may now become legally relevant.
A must-listen for legal professionals and companies navigating digital regulation, this episode provides a structured and practical analysis of how litigation may drive regulatory change—and why platform design is becoming a core compliance issue.
Send us Fan Mail
📌 You can find our contacts 👉 www.dlapiper.com

0 Listeners