Internet privacy rights : rights to protect autonomy / Paul Bernal.
What rights to privacy do we have on the internet, and how can we make them real?
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Online Access: |
Full Text (via ProQuest) |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cambridge [U.K.] :
Cambridge University Press,
2014.
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Series: | Cambridge intellectual property and information law ;
24. |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Cover; Half-title; Series; Title; Copyright; Contents; Preface and acknowledgements; 1 Internet privacy rights; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The internet in contemporary life; 1.2 Data and the internet; 1.3 Underlying questions and a paradigm shift; 1.4 Autonomy as the prime concern; 1.5 Privacy per se?; 1.6 Symbiotic regulation and the Symbiotic Web; 2 Privacy and autonomy on the internet; 2.1 Threats to autonomy on the internet; 2.2 Competing interests: individuals, governments, businesses; 2.3 Privacy as a protection for autonomy; 3 Internet privacy rights.
- 3.1 A right to roam the internet with privacy3.2 A right to monitor those who monitor us; 3.3 A right to delete personal data; 3.4 A right to an online identity; 4 The impact of internet privacy rights; 4.1 The impact on individuals; 4.2 The impact on governments; 4.3 The impact on businesses; 5 A privacy-friendly future?; 2 Privacy, autonomy and the internet; 1 Autonomy; 1.1 A broad definition of autonomy; 1.2 Legal philosophy; 1.3 Historical, natural rights and positivist perspectives; 1.4 Limitations to autonomy; 2 Privacy; 2.1 The challenge of capturing the character of privacy.
- 2.2 Privacy as a fundamental or an instrumental right2.3 Informational privacy and internet privacy; 2.4 Privacy and control; 2.5 How the internet has challenged privacy; 3 Autonomy and consent; 3.1 The complexity of consent on the internet; 3.2 The power of the default
- and opt-in or opt-out; 3.3 Is consent a red herring?; 3.4 Collaborative consent: consent as a process and a dialogue; 4 Autonomy, privacy, challenges and criticisms; 4.1 The security challenge; 4.2 The economic challenge; 4.3 The communitarian critique; 4.4 Feminist critiques; 4.5 Transparency critiques and challenges.
- 5 Privacy is not the enemy3 The Symbiotic Web; 1 The Symbiotic Web; 1.1 What is the Symbiotic Web?; 1.2 The evolution of the Symbiotic Web; 1.3 The emergence of the Symbiotic Web; 2 The make-up of the benign symbiosis; 2.1 Search engines; 2.2 Communications providers; 2.3 Social networking services; 2.4 Internet Service Providers; 2.5 Commercial websites; 2.6 The majority of the web?; 3 The risks of a malign symbiosis; 3.1 Who is serving whom? Alliances and favouritism; 3.2 Tailoring and Balkanisation; 3.3 Risks associated with particular data types; 3.4 The burgeoning market in data.
- 4 Governments and the Symbiotic Web4.1 Tensions and balance; 4.2 Harnessing the Symbiotic Web; 5 Managing the symbiosis; 5.1 Symbiotic regulation for the Symbiotic Web; 5.2 New business models; 4 Law, privacy and the internet
- the landscape; 1 The role of law in the internet; 1.1 Cyberlibertarians and cyberpaternalists; 1.2 Network communitarians: the active community; 1.3 Law, privacy and autonomy
- and the role of rights; 2 Privacy-protective law; 2.1 Data protection and the Data Protection Directive; 2.2 Implementation and reform; 2.3 The E-Privacy Directive and the 'Cookies Directive'