Madhavi Singh

Madhavi Singh is the Deputy Director of the Thurman Arnold Project at Yale School of Management and a Fellow with the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. She has previously been a Research Associate at the National University of Singapore and a Visiting Lecturer at the National Law School of India University. Her research interests lie at the intersection of antitrust and tech regulation, including comparative perspectives spanning the EU, US and Asia.

Lessons From the EU and UK for Strengthening India’s Digital Competition Regime

As India contemplates adopting its Digital Competition Bill, Amber Darr and Madhavi Singh examine lessons from the European Union’s and United Kingdom’s legislative forays into digital markets. They argue that India must rethink its reliance on formal long-form enforcement and invest in regulatory capacity if it hopes to deliver an ex ante regime for a fair and contestable digital economy.

Can Middleware Save Social Media From Big Tech?

Big Tech’s monopoly over online discourse threatens democracy. "Middleware" promises a path forward by adding competitive, customizable layers of recommendation algorithms. But can middleware...

Antitrust Alone Cannot Solve the Big Tech Problem  

Madhavi Singh argues that antitrust alone cannot reign in Big Tech monopolies. Antitrust efforts need to be supplemented by changes to corporate governance that incorporate the interests of all stakeholders and not just those of profit-maximizing shareholders.

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