
I. Abstract
Digital platform markets challenge conventional modes of competition enforcement by amplifying feedback effects, cumulative advantage, and temporal irreversibility. In such settings, regulatory outcomes are shaped by deeper institutional ways of seeing how harm unfolds over time in addition to the routine legal and economic processes. Following up on the first part of this blog, this second part examines epistemic asymmetry within India’s competition regime through the WhatsApp–Meta litigation, focusing on the divergent regulatory episteme of the Competition Commission of India and the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal. While both institutions addressed the same conduct through the same statutory lens, they operated with distinct temporal and harm-oriented orientations, leading to sharply different assessments of remedy design, particularly the Commission’s now-set-aside five-year data-sharing prohibition. The analysis argues that this divergence reflects not mere doctrinal disagreement but a structural asymmetry in institutional capacity to reason about dynamic, feedback-driven markets. In digital contexts where early regulatory choices can have irreversible long-run effects, such asymmetry risks under-correction, strategic arbitrage, and weakened deterrence. The blog concludes that effective digital competition enforcement requires epistemic coherence across institutions without sacrificing adjudicatory independence, treating alignment in how future harm is conceptualised as a core component of regulatory capacity.
II. Introduction
India’s competition regime is increasingly being tested by the realities of digital markets. As platforms intermediate communication, commerce, and attention at scale, regulatory institutions are forced to confront forms of power that do not map neatly onto traditional categories of market definition, price effects, or firm conduct. In this setting, disagreements between institutions are inevitable. What is more revealing, however, is when such disagreements point not merely to doctrinal divergence, but to epistemic asymmetry. Building on the idea of regulatory episteme discussed in the previous part of this blog, this part examines how epistemic asymmetry manifests within India’s competition enforcement.
The first part of this blog described epistemic fragmentation as a condition in which different institutions operate with distinct cognitive grammars, leading them to interpret the same reality in incompatible ways. Digital markets sharpen this problem further. Here, institutions are not only fragmented but asymmetrically positioned in their ability to perceive dynamic processes such as feedback loops, cumulative advantage, and irreversibility.
Epistemic asymmetry in Indian competition regime arises with the Competition Commission of India (CCI) structurally oriented towards reasoning about evolving trajectories and nuanced market realities, while the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) taking a more bounded approach in the appellate stage. While the blog recognises that both modes of reasoning are legitimate and often necessary, it argues that difficulty emerges when they interact within the same enforcement ecosystem without a shared framework for translating insights and analyses between them. To illustrate this point, the blog uses the WhatsApp Privacy Policy case as a window into this asymmetry, despite the many concurrent findings in both stages of this case

