Unilateral Internet regulation sparks global harmonization challenges and spillover effects.
The article discusses how different countries can regulate Internet transactions on their own. It argues that the fear of many countries regulating the Internet is not as big of a problem as some think. Instead, the real issue is when one country's rules affect others. While it suggests working together to solve this, it's not easy. So, for now, each country will likely keep regulating the Internet on its own. This might not be as bad for the Internet's future as people think.