Management & Finance - Europe thinks seriously about the Internet
In: Crossborder monitor: weekly briefing service for international executives, Band 7, Heft 20, S. 3
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In: Crossborder monitor: weekly briefing service for international executives, Band 7, Heft 20, S. 3
In: Europe: magazine of the European Community, Heft 392, S. 6-7
ISSN: 0279-9790, 0191-4545
In: 4/3: Fachzeitschrift zu Kriegsdienstverweigerung, Wehrdienst und Zivildienst, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 118
ISSN: 0176-8662
In: European business review, Band 98, Heft 3
ISSN: 1758-7107
In: Kommunalpolitische Blätter: KOPO ; Wissen, was vor Ort passiert! ; Stimme der Kommunalpolitischen Vereinigung von CDU und CSU, Band 50, Heft 3, S. 42-45
ISSN: 0177-9184, 0177-9184
In: International Studies Review
ISSN: 1468-2486
In: Konflikt- und Gefahrensituationen in Bibliotheken
In: E-Political Socialization, the Press and Politics
Erscheinungsjahre: 1999-2003 (elektronisch)
ISSN: 1864-9092
ISSN: 1435-2257
Ineffectual legal-assistance cooperation increasingly prompts governments to apply laws extraterritorially or to force data localisation, with dire consequences for the free flow of data and the global economy. As a result, different layers of national laws counteract and sometimes contradict one another. In response, governments conclude bilateral and multilateral treaties to resolve the problem of online crime and law enforcement. In judiciary co-operation, there are so-called mutual legal assistance treaties (MLATs) that provide for cross-border legal enforcement. Some international treaties, most notably the Council of Europe's Convention on Cybercrime, go beyond MLATs and seek to harmonise criminal laws of the signatories. Finally, bilateral and multilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) ensures that these legal measures are not disproportionate and trade barriers on legitimate commercial activities. The paper argues for the necessity to build a framework with stricter standards for legal assistance and stronger safeguards to protect civil liberties, human rights, rule of law and core principles of transparency. In turn, improved co-operation and safeguards make unilateral measures (such as data localisation requirement) superfluous - thus, the protocol would also incorporate negative rules that are often found in FTAs, to prevent governments from enacting such measures that re-territorise the internet.
BASE
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 8, Heft 6, S. 859-876
ISSN: 1461-7315
This article draws on empirical research into internet use by minority ethnic women to consider whether anonymity remains a useful focus for sociocultural studies of internet identities. The central argument of the article is that the time has come for internet identity research to reposition itself conceptually, to move away from a preoccupation with the generalized, enduring claim that internet identities are anonymous, multiple and fragmented-not only because, in some cases, online identities are continuous with offline selves, but also, more importantly, because common uses of the concept of anonymity are limited as starting points for carrying out analyses of internet experiences. In short, it argues that the terms of internet identity research are problematic, that contexts matter, and that studies of internet identities need to engage with and learn from ongoing debates within cultural studies which call into question the usefulness of the very concept of identity.
In: Mecklermedia
In: Wiley computer publishing