Data Protection and Privacy
In: Issues in Privacy and Data Protection
Foreword -- Contents -- Contributors -- About the Authors -- Part I: Fundamental and Legal Questions -- Chapter 1: Legal Fundamentalism: Is Data Protection Really a Fundamental Right? -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Disconnection of Data Protection from the Right to Privacy -- 1.3 The Fundamentalisation of Data Protection -- 1.4 What Is a Fundamental Right? -- 1.5 Is Data Protection a Fundamental Right? -- 1.6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 2: Is There a Right to Offline Alternatives in a Digital World? -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Context of the Problem: Why We Should Think About a Right to Remain Offline? -- 2.2.1 The Value of Established Practices -- 2.2.2 Basic Services and Their Dependence on Network Technologies -- 2.2.3 Autonomy and Individual Property -- 2.2.4 The Right to Remain Offline: An Individualist Approach to Societal Problems -- 2.2.5 Individual Privacy vs. Public Benefits -- 2.3 How Reasonable Is a Right to Offline Alternatives? -- 2.3.1 To Be or Not To Be in the Network - Is Not the Question -- 2.3.2 Techniques of De-networking: Social Relations in Absence of Interaction -- 2.3.3 Why We (Can) Have a Right to Offline Alternatives -- 2.4 What Is the Legal Status Quo? -- 2.4.1 To Set the Scene: The "eCall Regulation" -- 2.4.2 Legal Standard: Art. 7, 8 of the Charter -- Scope -- Restriction -- Justification -- 2.4.3 Conclusion -- 2.5 Offline Alternatives in EU Policy Debates -- 2.5.1 The Right to the Silence of the Chips on the European Policy Agenda -- 2.5.2 A Paradigm Shift in European Politics? -- 2.5.3 Digital Sovereignty, Algorithmic Regulation and the Individual -- 2.6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 3: What Is New with the Internet of Things in Privacy and Data Protection? Four Legal Challenges on Sharing and Control in IoT -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 IoT and Structural Data Sharing -- 3.2.1 Levels of IoT