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This book explores the most pressing challenges in AI technologies and practices, the entanglements of the ‘AI and law’ and ‘AI and the rule of law’ nexus and digitally transformed fracturing world that is shaped by digital governance and digital ethics underpinned by responsible AI, and AI4People viewpoints. It draws attention to unraveling the legal labyrinth of regulatory frameworks on AI, the rule of law, digital human rights, digital democracy, and how these AI regulations intervene in the digital transformation of LegalTech across the world. It emphasizes the need for a robust regulatory framework to mitigate the risks of AI and overcome legal hurdles. The book scrutinizes the ...
This book constitutes the refereed conference proceedings of the 11th Annual Privacy Forum, APF 2023 in Lyon, France in June 2023. The 8 full papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 37 submissions. The papers are organized in the following topical sections: Emerging Technologies and Protection of Personal Data, Data Protection Principles and Data Subject Rights, Modelling Data Protection and Privacy, and Modelling Perceptions of Privacy.
The steady growth of internet commerce over the past twenty years has given rise to a host of new legal issues in a broad range of fields. This authoritative Research Handbook comprises chapters by leading scholars which will provide a solid foundation for newcomers to the subject and also offer exciting new insights that will further the understanding of e-commerce experts. Key topics covered include: contracting, payments, intellectual property, extraterritorial enforcement, alternative dispute resolution, social media, consumer protection, network neutrality, online gambling, domain name governance, and privacy.
Drawing on rich, empirical case studies, this innovative book provides a contemporary and comprehensive exploration of the plural, dynamic and precarious processes, materials, practices, interventions and relationships on social network sites, and their resultant power effects, when copyright and data privacy rights are at stake.
The existence of a structured enforcement system is an inherent feature of national legal orders and one of the core elements of State sovereignty. The very limited power to issue sanctions has often been deemed a gap in the EC legal order. Over the years, the situation has progressively changed. The Union’s institutional setting is growing in complexity and a variety of agencies has been or is expected to be endowed with law enforcement responsibilities. In addition, the so-called competence creep has led the EU to play an increasingly prominent role in several areas of EU law enforcement, including the issuing of sanctions. This book examines these developments, focusing on both the gene...
This note examines the decision of the House of Lords in Lonsdale (t/a Lonsdale Agencies) v Howard & Hallam Limited where the House of Lords were asked to rule on the correct method to be applied when calculating the compensation of commercial agents under Regulation 17 of The Commercial Agents (Council Directive) Regulations 1993 (the Regulations). This ruling settles this aspect of the law in England and Wales after almost fifteen years of legal and commercial uncertainty on the matter.
In response partly to the range of data protection law issues raised by the use of third-party cookies or similar technology (TPC) in modern digital advertising, prominent industry players in countries like Europe are starting to block TPC. In anticipation of the upcoming decline of TPC, key AdTech players, with the support of standardisation bodies like the World Wide Web Consortium, are forging the path ahead in various ways including developing and implementing new techniques, practices and processes that do not involve TPC data points, such as mining telco data or using traditional forms of advertising like contextual campaigns in avant-garde ways, to transform and amplify their business...
This deliverable presents the preliminary results of T:D-4.1 of Work Package 44 of the Cloud Accountability Project. This deliverable is partly an exploratory deliverable which investigates whether there has been a rise in the number of investigations of cloud providers conducted by the European data protection authorities over the past five years. If the 'rise' thesis can be supported, the second part of this deliverable will examine what this rise tells us about information privacy regulation in the context of cloud computing. This deliverable advances two distinct but interconnected arguments. Firstly, we argue that cloud investigations are increasing in significance and visibility as reg...