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Main Authors: Bak-Coleman, Joseph, O'Connor, Cailin, Bergstrom, Carl, West, Jevin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.19894
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author Bak-Coleman, Joseph
O'Connor, Cailin
Bergstrom, Carl
West, Jevin
author_facet Bak-Coleman, Joseph
O'Connor, Cailin
Bergstrom, Carl
West, Jevin
contents Emerging information technologies like social media, search engines, and AI can have a broad impact on public health, political institutions, social dynamics, and the natural world. It is critical to develop a scientific understanding of these impacts to inform evidence-based technology policy that minimizes harm and maximizes benefits. Unlike most other global-scale scientific challenges, however, the data necessary for scientific progress are generated and controlled by the same industry that might be subject to evidence-based regulation. Moreover, technology companies historically have been, and continue to be, a major source of funding for this field. These asymmetries in information and funding raise significant concerns about the potential for undue industry influence on the scientific record. In this Perspective, we explore how technology companies can influence our scientific understanding of their products. We argue that science faces unique challenges in the context of technology research that will require strengthening existing safeguards and constructing wholly new ones.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_19894
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Risks of Industry Influence in Tech Research
Bak-Coleman, Joseph
O'Connor, Cailin
Bergstrom, Carl
West, Jevin
Social and Information Networks
Human-Computer Interaction
Emerging information technologies like social media, search engines, and AI can have a broad impact on public health, political institutions, social dynamics, and the natural world. It is critical to develop a scientific understanding of these impacts to inform evidence-based technology policy that minimizes harm and maximizes benefits. Unlike most other global-scale scientific challenges, however, the data necessary for scientific progress are generated and controlled by the same industry that might be subject to evidence-based regulation. Moreover, technology companies historically have been, and continue to be, a major source of funding for this field. These asymmetries in information and funding raise significant concerns about the potential for undue industry influence on the scientific record. In this Perspective, we explore how technology companies can influence our scientific understanding of their products. We argue that science faces unique challenges in the context of technology research that will require strengthening existing safeguards and constructing wholly new ones.
title The Risks of Industry Influence in Tech Research
topic Social and Information Networks
Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.19894