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Home » Open Market in Africa in the Age of Big Tech

Open Market in Africa in the Age of Big Tech

johnmahamaBy johnmahamaJuly 5, 2025 Social Issues & Advocacy No Comments4 Mins Read
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Open Market in Africa in the Age of Big Tech

Big Tech giants such as Google, Amazon, Apple, and Meta emerged from consumer-driven innovation and now shape how the world communicates, trades, and accesses information. Yet their dominance has triggered government scrutiny and regulatory actions under the guise of protecting competition. To ensure fair competition, policymakers should prioritize consumer education, decentralization, and modern antitrust frameworks.

The European Union’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) is designed to rein in gatekeeper platforms through strict compliance requirements. Heavy regulations often ignore the market’s ability to self-correct and risk stifling innovation. Worse, some governments exploit these laws for censorship and surveillance, threatening rights like free expression and digital privacy. Rather than aggressive regulation, ensuring fair digital competition requires stronger consumer education, decentralized platforms, and modern antitrust frameworks suited to today’s economy.

History shows that tech dominance is rarely permanent. Companies like IBM and Microsoft were once unbeatable but lost ground to new innovators through market shifts, not government intervention. Internet Explorer lost to Google Chrome due to user preference, not regulation. Today, platforms like Mastodon, Brave, and blockchain applications like Ethereum are emerging alternatives to big tech services, proving that open markets naturally encourage innovation and competition.

Regulatory overreach does not promote competition; it restricts it. Compliance costs for antitrust rules and digital market regulations disproportionately impact smaller firms and startups, making it harder for new competitors to enter the market. The Digital Markets Act in the European Union, for example, introduces stringent rules that burden companies with excessive compliance requirements, discouraging expansion and technological advancement.

Rather than relying on government intervention, a market-driven approach can ensure healthy competition while preserving innovation. It begins with empowering consumers through digital literacy. Schools, private firms, and civil society should embed it in curricula, helping people make informed choices online. Estonia’s e-Estonia project shows how national programs can reduce dependence on dominant platforms and foster competition. Consumer education and digital literacy play a crucial role in ensuring market fairness. When individuals understand their digital rights and the alternative services available, they can make informed choices that drive natural competition.

Industry stakeholders, including consumer groups and tech firms, should promote transparency on data use and platform alternatives. Organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation have led awareness campaigns, helping consumers understand their digital rights and privacy, fostering competition without excessive regulation.

Encouraging decentralized platforms can also help counterbalance big tech dominance without government overreach. Venture capital firms and private investors can drive innovation by funding blockchain-based applications and decentralized web solutions that challenge the traditional gatekeepers of the digital economy. Blockchain-based solutions, such as Ethereum, offer decentralized applications that bypass traditional gatekeepers, giving users more autonomy over their data and interactions. South Korea has been a leader in promoting blockchain adoption for financial and communication services, reducing dependence on centralized tech firms. The rise of alternative social media networks like Bluesky further illustrates how market innovation can challenge monopolistic control.

A more pragmatic approach to antitrust regulation is also necessary. Instead of imposing blanket restrictions on tech giants, regulators should modernize existing laws. For instance, Nigeria’s Data Protection Bill 2023 is a step in the right direction, but remains under-enforced. A deliberate and homegrown legal framework will ensure that the fast-evolving tech landscape serves democratic values and protects the rights of users, especially as journalism continues to rely on digital infrastructure for investigation, publication, and distribution.

Big tech’s dominance is not a market failure but a reflection of consumer preference and innovation. The belief that these companies require government intervention ignores historical evidence and the natural evolution of market competition. Instead of imposing heavy-handed regulations that stifle progress, policymakers should prioritize free-market solutions that promote choice, competition, and technological advancement. If history has taught us anything, it is that no company stays on top forever, so long as markets remain open and free.

Ibrahim Abdulsalam Olasunkanmi is a writing fellow.



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