This paper examines the evolving legal tensions between platform liability avoidance mechanisms and indirect participation in unlawful digital activities facilitated through third-party uploaded content. Contemporary digital platforms increasingly operate through algorithmically mediated ecosystems in which user-generated content becomes economically valuable through engagement optimization, targeted dissemination, and platform monetization structures. While safe harbor doctrines were originally developed to protect intermediaries lacking direct editorial control over user activity, contemporary platform architectures increasingly blur the distinction between passive hosting and active participation. This study analyzes the structural limitations of safe harbor protections within transnational digital environments characterized by algorithmic amplification, recommendation systems, behavioral optimization, and monetized engagement infrastructures. Through comparative doctrinal analysis integrating intermediary liability theory, digital governance frameworks, and platform accountability models, the paper argues that contemporary safe harbor regimes inadequately address indirect forms of platform participation that contribute to the dissemination, amplification, and normalization of unlawful content. The study concludes that emerging digital ecosystems require revised legal standards capable of distinguishing genuinely neutral intermediaries from algorithmically interventionist platforms operating through economically incentivized visibility systems. https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.6850738
Pommier Gallo, PhD., Sergio (Wed,) studied this question.