The CJEU's Weltimmo Data Privacy Ruling: Lost in the Data Privacy Turmoil, Yet so very important
In: Maastricht journal of European and comparative law: MJ, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 332-341
ISSN: 2399-5548
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In: Maastricht journal of European and comparative law: MJ, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 332-341
ISSN: 2399-5548
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Data Privacy Day should serve as a good reminder to consumers to check that they are acting on their own privacy preferences, but also to policymakers of the tradeoffs involved with overly restrictive privacy laws.
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In: New York University Law Review, Band 94
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In: 71 Florida Law Review 365 (2019)
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In: Texas A&M University School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 22-10
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In: (2015) 134 Privacy Laws & Business International Report
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In: Business Lawyer, Band 70, Heft 1
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In: International Journal of Social Science & Economic Research, Band 8, Heft 5, S. 1167-1174
ISSN: 2455-8834
This paper focuses on the data privacy issues that arise with the utilization of e-commerce platforms, focusing on the challenges and ability to protect a consumer's data in an online transaction. As the popularity of e-commerce continues to grow and new platforms tend to rise, security and privacy concerns of personal information become supreme. This paper explores aspects of data privacy and multiple criteria of concerns that come along with it. It also discusses note-able privacy breaching incidents in this industry and how one can be safe within such digital bubble. Additionally, this paper talks briefly about the government regulations and legal framework that keeps a check over them along with a common consumer's point of view towards it.
Blog: Legal Theory Blog
Graham Greenleaf (University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law) has posted Global Data Privacy Laws 2023: International Standards Stall, but UK Disrupts ((2023) 183 Privacy Laws & Business International Report 8-15) on SSRN. Here is the abstract: Since 2020...
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In: Current history: a journal of contemporary world affairs, Band 121, Heft 838, S. 316-321
ISSN: 1944-785X
The COVID-19 pandemic has presented lessons on using health data to improve, save, and protect lives, and the need to improve the stewardship of health privacy. Before the pandemic, the United States already had a broken health data system, fragmented and dominated by public-private partnerships in which the businesses involved sought to commercialize patient data. More than two years into the pandemic, in many respects health data privacy is even more fractured and prone to being misused to profiteer and to harm rather than help the most vulnerable. Health data is now being used by law enforcement to criminalize abortion and undocumented immigration, making reform an urgent necessity.