Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chicago
EGEA Spa - Bocconi University Press
2023
|
Online-Zugang: | HWR01 |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (256 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9788831322720 |
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505 | 8 | |a Description -- Biographia -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part I - The Internet Landscape -- 1. The Law of the Internet -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The regulatory conundrum -- 1.3 Cyberanarchy -- 1.4 Against cyberanarchy -- 1.5 From the "law of the horse" to "code is law" -- 1.6 From the regulatory dilemma to the rise of Internet bills of rights -- 1.7 The constitutional dimension of the Internet -- 1.8 Conclusions -- 2. Internet and Jurisdiction -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Cyberspace and jurisdiction -- 2.3 Beyond US courts -- 2.4 Jurisdiction and cyberspace in Europe -- 2.5 Conclusions -- 3. Internet Access and Net Neutrality -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The right to Internet access -- 3.3 The right to Internet access between international and national law -- 3.3.1 National initiatives on Internet access regulation -- 3.4 The right to Internet access: Do we really need it? -- 3.5 Net neutrality -- 3.6 Conclusions -- Part II - Freedom of Expression -- 4. Freedom of Expression and the Internet -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The origins of freedom of expression -- 4.3 Freedom of expression across the ocean -- 4.4 Freedom of expression in action -- 4.4.1 The US Supreme Court -- 4.4.2 The European Court of Human Rights -- 4.4.3 The European Court of Justice -- 4.5 Conclusions -- 5. Internet Service Provider Liability -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The rise and consolidation of the "safe harbor" doctrine -- 5.2.1 The US system: Section 230 CDA -- 5.2.2 Secondary liability: Another road? -- 5.3 The legal regime of online intermediaries within the EU: The e-Commerce Directive -- 5.4 European courts and online intermediaries -- 5.4.1 Case law from the European Court of Justice -- 5.4.2 Case law from the European Court of Human Rights -- 5.4.3 National case law: The example of Italy | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.5 Data protection and liability of online intermediaries -- 5.6 Toward a new regulatory framework: The DSA proposal -- 5.7 Conclusions -- 6. Hate Speech and Disinformation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Hate speech across the Atlantic -- 6.2.1 Hate speech in the US First Amendment case law -- 6.2.2 Hate speech in the case law of the ECtHR -- 6.2.3 Tackling hate speech at the EU level -- 6.2.4 Tackling terrorist content in the EU: The TERREG Regulation -- 6.3 Online disinformation -- 6.3.1 Defining disinformation -- 6.3.2 EU policies against disinformation -- 6.4 A comparative overview of domestic legislations -- 6.4.1 Germany -- 6.4.2 Italy -- 6.4.3 France -- 6.4.4 The cases of Russia, Singapore and Malaysia -- 6.5 Conclusions -- 7. Copyright in the Digital Age -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The birth of a "pan-European" Internet copyright law: InfoSoc Directive -- 7.2.1 The rights over works and other subject matter: Content, limitations and exceptions -- 7.2.2 The notion of "communication to the public" and the intervention of the ECJ -- 7.3 The new DSM Copyright Directive -- 7.3.1 The new rules on limitations and exceptions -- 7.3.2 Online content-sharing service providers and the "value gap" provision of art. 17 -- 7.3.3 The case of Poland v. Parliament and Council on the annulment of art. 17 -- 7.4 Copyright and freedom of expression in the case law of the European courts -- 7.5 The administrative enforcement of copyright: The examples of Italy and France -- 7.6 Conclusions -- 8. Audiovisual Media Services -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 From broadcasting to audiovisual media services -- 8.3 The AVMSD Refit and the new notion of video-sharing platform services -- 8.4 The "country-of-origin" principle and the rules on jurisdiction -- 8.5 The rules on content -- 8.5.1 The rules on audiovisual commercial communication | |
505 | 8 | |a 8.5.2 The regulation on harmful content: Notably, the protection of minors and the prohibition of hate speech and terrorist content -- 8.5.3 Other rules for the pursuit of public interests -- 8.6 Promotion and prominence of European works on non-linear services -- 8.7 The rules on video-sharing platform services: Focus on article 28b -- 8.8 Conclusions -- Part III - Privacy and Data Protection -- 9. The Right to Privacy and Data Protection -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The right to privacy and to data protection -- 9.2.1 The right to privacy and the right to data protection: A legal definition -- 9.3 The judicial consolidation of the right to privacy -- 9.4 The evolution of privacy and data protection in Europe -- 9.4.1 The evolution of privacy and data protection under the case law of the ECtHR -- 9.5 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union -- 9.5.1 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union under the lenses of the ECJ -- 9.6 Conclusions -- 10. The General Data Protection Regulation -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Material and territorial scope -- 10.2.1 Data controller -- 10.2.2 Data processor -- 10.2.3 Territorial scope -- 10.3 General principles -- 10.4 Legal bases -- 10.4.1 Consent -- 10.4.2 Other legal bases -- 10.5 Data subjects' rights -- 10.5.1 Right of access -- 10.5.2 Right to rectification -- 10.5.3 Right to erasure -- 10.5.4 Right to restriction of processing -- 10.5.5 Right to data portability -- 10.5.6 Right to object -- 10.5.7 Automated individual decision-making, including profiling -- 10.6 Obligations under the GDPR -- 10.6.1 Records of processing activities -- 10.6.2 Security measures related to processing -- 10.6.3 Data breach -- 10.6.4 Data protection impact assessment and prior consultation -- 10.6.5 Appointment of a data protection officer -- 10.7 Transfer of personal data -- 10.8 Authorities and sanctions | |
505 | 8 | |a 10.9 Conclusions -- 11. Privacy, Identity and the Right to Be Forgotten -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Privacy and digital identity -- 11.3 The right to be forgotten (or the right to erasure) -- 11.3.1 The traditional definition of the right to be forgotten -- 11.3.2 The right to be forgotten on the Internet -- 11.4 Google Spain (C-131/12) and the framing of the right to be forgotten in the digital age -- 11.4.1 Facts of the case and Advocate General opinion -- 11.4.2 To erase or not to erase? The ECJ reasoning -- 11.5 The aftermath of Google Spain -- 11.5.1 Article 17 of the General Data Protection Regulation -- 11.5.2 The territorial scope of the right to erasure -- 11.6 Conclusions -- 12. Transfer of Personal Data -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Personal data transfers according to the GDPR -- 12.2.1 Adequacy decisions -- 12.2.2 Appropriate safeguards -- 12.2.3 Derogations -- 12.3 The Schrems saga -- 12.3.1 Schrems I -- 12.3.2 Schrems II -- 12.4 Recent developments -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 13. Data Retention and Law Enforcement -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 First challenges to data retention -- 13.3 Data retention after Digital Rights Ireland -- 13.4 Law Enforcement Directive -- 13.4.1 Material scope -- 13.4.2 Principles of data processing -- 13.4.3 Logging -- 13.4.4 Transfers of personal data to third countries or international organizations -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References | |
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contents | Description -- Biographia -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part I - The Internet Landscape -- 1. The Law of the Internet -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The regulatory conundrum -- 1.3 Cyberanarchy -- 1.4 Against cyberanarchy -- 1.5 From the "law of the horse" to "code is law" -- 1.6 From the regulatory dilemma to the rise of Internet bills of rights -- 1.7 The constitutional dimension of the Internet -- 1.8 Conclusions -- 2. Internet and Jurisdiction -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Cyberspace and jurisdiction -- 2.3 Beyond US courts -- 2.4 Jurisdiction and cyberspace in Europe -- 2.5 Conclusions -- 3. Internet Access and Net Neutrality -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The right to Internet access -- 3.3 The right to Internet access between international and national law -- 3.3.1 National initiatives on Internet access regulation -- 3.4 The right to Internet access: Do we really need it? -- 3.5 Net neutrality -- 3.6 Conclusions -- Part II - Freedom of Expression -- 4. Freedom of Expression and the Internet -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The origins of freedom of expression -- 4.3 Freedom of expression across the ocean -- 4.4 Freedom of expression in action -- 4.4.1 The US Supreme Court -- 4.4.2 The European Court of Human Rights -- 4.4.3 The European Court of Justice -- 4.5 Conclusions -- 5. Internet Service Provider Liability -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The rise and consolidation of the "safe harbor" doctrine -- 5.2.1 The US system: Section 230 CDA -- 5.2.2 Secondary liability: Another road? -- 5.3 The legal regime of online intermediaries within the EU: The e-Commerce Directive -- 5.4 European courts and online intermediaries -- 5.4.1 Case law from the European Court of Justice -- 5.4.2 Case law from the European Court of Human Rights -- 5.4.3 National case law: The example of Italy 5.5 Data protection and liability of online intermediaries -- 5.6 Toward a new regulatory framework: The DSA proposal -- 5.7 Conclusions -- 6. Hate Speech and Disinformation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Hate speech across the Atlantic -- 6.2.1 Hate speech in the US First Amendment case law -- 6.2.2 Hate speech in the case law of the ECtHR -- 6.2.3 Tackling hate speech at the EU level -- 6.2.4 Tackling terrorist content in the EU: The TERREG Regulation -- 6.3 Online disinformation -- 6.3.1 Defining disinformation -- 6.3.2 EU policies against disinformation -- 6.4 A comparative overview of domestic legislations -- 6.4.1 Germany -- 6.4.2 Italy -- 6.4.3 France -- 6.4.4 The cases of Russia, Singapore and Malaysia -- 6.5 Conclusions -- 7. Copyright in the Digital Age -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The birth of a "pan-European" Internet copyright law: InfoSoc Directive -- 7.2.1 The rights over works and other subject matter: Content, limitations and exceptions -- 7.2.2 The notion of "communication to the public" and the intervention of the ECJ -- 7.3 The new DSM Copyright Directive -- 7.3.1 The new rules on limitations and exceptions -- 7.3.2 Online content-sharing service providers and the "value gap" provision of art. 17 -- 7.3.3 The case of Poland v. Parliament and Council on the annulment of art. 17 -- 7.4 Copyright and freedom of expression in the case law of the European courts -- 7.5 The administrative enforcement of copyright: The examples of Italy and France -- 7.6 Conclusions -- 8. Audiovisual Media Services -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 From broadcasting to audiovisual media services -- 8.3 The AVMSD Refit and the new notion of video-sharing platform services -- 8.4 The "country-of-origin" principle and the rules on jurisdiction -- 8.5 The rules on content -- 8.5.1 The rules on audiovisual commercial communication 8.5.2 The regulation on harmful content: Notably, the protection of minors and the prohibition of hate speech and terrorist content -- 8.5.3 Other rules for the pursuit of public interests -- 8.6 Promotion and prominence of European works on non-linear services -- 8.7 The rules on video-sharing platform services: Focus on article 28b -- 8.8 Conclusions -- Part III - Privacy and Data Protection -- 9. The Right to Privacy and Data Protection -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The right to privacy and to data protection -- 9.2.1 The right to privacy and the right to data protection: A legal definition -- 9.3 The judicial consolidation of the right to privacy -- 9.4 The evolution of privacy and data protection in Europe -- 9.4.1 The evolution of privacy and data protection under the case law of the ECtHR -- 9.5 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union -- 9.5.1 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union under the lenses of the ECJ -- 9.6 Conclusions -- 10. The General Data Protection Regulation -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Material and territorial scope -- 10.2.1 Data controller -- 10.2.2 Data processor -- 10.2.3 Territorial scope -- 10.3 General principles -- 10.4 Legal bases -- 10.4.1 Consent -- 10.4.2 Other legal bases -- 10.5 Data subjects' rights -- 10.5.1 Right of access -- 10.5.2 Right to rectification -- 10.5.3 Right to erasure -- 10.5.4 Right to restriction of processing -- 10.5.5 Right to data portability -- 10.5.6 Right to object -- 10.5.7 Automated individual decision-making, including profiling -- 10.6 Obligations under the GDPR -- 10.6.1 Records of processing activities -- 10.6.2 Security measures related to processing -- 10.6.3 Data breach -- 10.6.4 Data protection impact assessment and prior consultation -- 10.6.5 Appointment of a data protection officer -- 10.7 Transfer of personal data -- 10.8 Authorities and sanctions 10.9 Conclusions -- 11. Privacy, Identity and the Right to Be Forgotten -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Privacy and digital identity -- 11.3 The right to be forgotten (or the right to erasure) -- 11.3.1 The traditional definition of the right to be forgotten -- 11.3.2 The right to be forgotten on the Internet -- 11.4 Google Spain (C-131/12) and the framing of the right to be forgotten in the digital age -- 11.4.1 Facts of the case and Advocate General opinion -- 11.4.2 To erase or not to erase? The ECJ reasoning -- 11.5 The aftermath of Google Spain -- 11.5.1 Article 17 of the General Data Protection Regulation -- 11.5.2 The territorial scope of the right to erasure -- 11.6 Conclusions -- 12. Transfer of Personal Data -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Personal data transfers according to the GDPR -- 12.2.1 Adequacy decisions -- 12.2.2 Appropriate safeguards -- 12.2.3 Derogations -- 12.3 The Schrems saga -- 12.3.1 Schrems I -- 12.3.2 Schrems II -- 12.4 Recent developments -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 13. Data Retention and Law Enforcement -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 First challenges to data retention -- 13.3 Data retention after Digital Rights Ireland -- 13.4 Law Enforcement Directive -- 13.4.1 Material scope -- 13.4.2 Principles of data processing -- 13.4.3 Logging -- 13.4.4 Transfers of personal data to third countries or international organizations -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References |
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Audiovisual Media Services -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 From broadcasting to audiovisual media services -- 8.3 The AVMSD Refit and the new notion of video-sharing platform services -- 8.4 The "country-of-origin" principle and the rules on jurisdiction -- 8.5 The rules on content -- 8.5.1 The rules on audiovisual commercial communication</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">8.5.2 The regulation on harmful content: Notably, the protection of minors and the prohibition of hate speech and terrorist content -- 8.5.3 Other rules for the pursuit of public interests -- 8.6 Promotion and prominence of European works on non-linear services -- 8.7 The rules on video-sharing platform services: Focus on article 28b -- 8.8 Conclusions -- Part III - Privacy and Data Protection -- 9. 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index_date | 2024-07-03T21:35:29Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:47:12Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9788831322720 |
language | English |
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publisher | EGEA Spa - Bocconi University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Pollicino, Oreste Verfasser aut Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights Chicago EGEA Spa - Bocconi University Press 2023 ©2023 1 Online-Ressource (256 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Description -- Biographia -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part I - The Internet Landscape -- 1. The Law of the Internet -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The regulatory conundrum -- 1.3 Cyberanarchy -- 1.4 Against cyberanarchy -- 1.5 From the "law of the horse" to "code is law" -- 1.6 From the regulatory dilemma to the rise of Internet bills of rights -- 1.7 The constitutional dimension of the Internet -- 1.8 Conclusions -- 2. Internet and Jurisdiction -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Cyberspace and jurisdiction -- 2.3 Beyond US courts -- 2.4 Jurisdiction and cyberspace in Europe -- 2.5 Conclusions -- 3. Internet Access and Net Neutrality -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The right to Internet access -- 3.3 The right to Internet access between international and national law -- 3.3.1 National initiatives on Internet access regulation -- 3.4 The right to Internet access: Do we really need it? -- 3.5 Net neutrality -- 3.6 Conclusions -- Part II - Freedom of Expression -- 4. Freedom of Expression and the Internet -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The origins of freedom of expression -- 4.3 Freedom of expression across the ocean -- 4.4 Freedom of expression in action -- 4.4.1 The US Supreme Court -- 4.4.2 The European Court of Human Rights -- 4.4.3 The European Court of Justice -- 4.5 Conclusions -- 5. Internet Service Provider Liability -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The rise and consolidation of the "safe harbor" doctrine -- 5.2.1 The US system: Section 230 CDA -- 5.2.2 Secondary liability: Another road? -- 5.3 The legal regime of online intermediaries within the EU: The e-Commerce Directive -- 5.4 European courts and online intermediaries -- 5.4.1 Case law from the European Court of Justice -- 5.4.2 Case law from the European Court of Human Rights -- 5.4.3 National case law: The example of Italy 5.5 Data protection and liability of online intermediaries -- 5.6 Toward a new regulatory framework: The DSA proposal -- 5.7 Conclusions -- 6. Hate Speech and Disinformation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Hate speech across the Atlantic -- 6.2.1 Hate speech in the US First Amendment case law -- 6.2.2 Hate speech in the case law of the ECtHR -- 6.2.3 Tackling hate speech at the EU level -- 6.2.4 Tackling terrorist content in the EU: The TERREG Regulation -- 6.3 Online disinformation -- 6.3.1 Defining disinformation -- 6.3.2 EU policies against disinformation -- 6.4 A comparative overview of domestic legislations -- 6.4.1 Germany -- 6.4.2 Italy -- 6.4.3 France -- 6.4.4 The cases of Russia, Singapore and Malaysia -- 6.5 Conclusions -- 7. Copyright in the Digital Age -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The birth of a "pan-European" Internet copyright law: InfoSoc Directive -- 7.2.1 The rights over works and other subject matter: Content, limitations and exceptions -- 7.2.2 The notion of "communication to the public" and the intervention of the ECJ -- 7.3 The new DSM Copyright Directive -- 7.3.1 The new rules on limitations and exceptions -- 7.3.2 Online content-sharing service providers and the "value gap" provision of art. 17 -- 7.3.3 The case of Poland v. Parliament and Council on the annulment of art. 17 -- 7.4 Copyright and freedom of expression in the case law of the European courts -- 7.5 The administrative enforcement of copyright: The examples of Italy and France -- 7.6 Conclusions -- 8. Audiovisual Media Services -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 From broadcasting to audiovisual media services -- 8.3 The AVMSD Refit and the new notion of video-sharing platform services -- 8.4 The "country-of-origin" principle and the rules on jurisdiction -- 8.5 The rules on content -- 8.5.1 The rules on audiovisual commercial communication 8.5.2 The regulation on harmful content: Notably, the protection of minors and the prohibition of hate speech and terrorist content -- 8.5.3 Other rules for the pursuit of public interests -- 8.6 Promotion and prominence of European works on non-linear services -- 8.7 The rules on video-sharing platform services: Focus on article 28b -- 8.8 Conclusions -- Part III - Privacy and Data Protection -- 9. The Right to Privacy and Data Protection -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The right to privacy and to data protection -- 9.2.1 The right to privacy and the right to data protection: A legal definition -- 9.3 The judicial consolidation of the right to privacy -- 9.4 The evolution of privacy and data protection in Europe -- 9.4.1 The evolution of privacy and data protection under the case law of the ECtHR -- 9.5 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union -- 9.5.1 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union under the lenses of the ECJ -- 9.6 Conclusions -- 10. The General Data Protection Regulation -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Material and territorial scope -- 10.2.1 Data controller -- 10.2.2 Data processor -- 10.2.3 Territorial scope -- 10.3 General principles -- 10.4 Legal bases -- 10.4.1 Consent -- 10.4.2 Other legal bases -- 10.5 Data subjects' rights -- 10.5.1 Right of access -- 10.5.2 Right to rectification -- 10.5.3 Right to erasure -- 10.5.4 Right to restriction of processing -- 10.5.5 Right to data portability -- 10.5.6 Right to object -- 10.5.7 Automated individual decision-making, including profiling -- 10.6 Obligations under the GDPR -- 10.6.1 Records of processing activities -- 10.6.2 Security measures related to processing -- 10.6.3 Data breach -- 10.6.4 Data protection impact assessment and prior consultation -- 10.6.5 Appointment of a data protection officer -- 10.7 Transfer of personal data -- 10.8 Authorities and sanctions 10.9 Conclusions -- 11. Privacy, Identity and the Right to Be Forgotten -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Privacy and digital identity -- 11.3 The right to be forgotten (or the right to erasure) -- 11.3.1 The traditional definition of the right to be forgotten -- 11.3.2 The right to be forgotten on the Internet -- 11.4 Google Spain (C-131/12) and the framing of the right to be forgotten in the digital age -- 11.4.1 Facts of the case and Advocate General opinion -- 11.4.2 To erase or not to erase? The ECJ reasoning -- 11.5 The aftermath of Google Spain -- 11.5.1 Article 17 of the General Data Protection Regulation -- 11.5.2 The territorial scope of the right to erasure -- 11.6 Conclusions -- 12. Transfer of Personal Data -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Personal data transfers according to the GDPR -- 12.2.1 Adequacy decisions -- 12.2.2 Appropriate safeguards -- 12.2.3 Derogations -- 12.3 The Schrems saga -- 12.3.1 Schrems I -- 12.3.2 Schrems II -- 12.4 Recent developments -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 13. Data Retention and Law Enforcement -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 First challenges to data retention -- 13.3 Data retention after Digital Rights Ireland -- 13.4 Law Enforcement Directive -- 13.4.1 Material scope -- 13.4.2 Principles of data processing -- 13.4.3 Logging -- 13.4.4 Transfers of personal data to third countries or international organizations -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References De Gregorio, Giovanni Sonstige oth Bassini, Marco Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Pollicino, Oreste Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights Chicago : EGEA Spa - Bocconi University Press,c2023 9788831322706 |
spellingShingle | Pollicino, Oreste Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights Description -- Biographia -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part I - The Internet Landscape -- 1. The Law of the Internet -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The regulatory conundrum -- 1.3 Cyberanarchy -- 1.4 Against cyberanarchy -- 1.5 From the "law of the horse" to "code is law" -- 1.6 From the regulatory dilemma to the rise of Internet bills of rights -- 1.7 The constitutional dimension of the Internet -- 1.8 Conclusions -- 2. Internet and Jurisdiction -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Cyberspace and jurisdiction -- 2.3 Beyond US courts -- 2.4 Jurisdiction and cyberspace in Europe -- 2.5 Conclusions -- 3. Internet Access and Net Neutrality -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The right to Internet access -- 3.3 The right to Internet access between international and national law -- 3.3.1 National initiatives on Internet access regulation -- 3.4 The right to Internet access: Do we really need it? -- 3.5 Net neutrality -- 3.6 Conclusions -- Part II - Freedom of Expression -- 4. Freedom of Expression and the Internet -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The origins of freedom of expression -- 4.3 Freedom of expression across the ocean -- 4.4 Freedom of expression in action -- 4.4.1 The US Supreme Court -- 4.4.2 The European Court of Human Rights -- 4.4.3 The European Court of Justice -- 4.5 Conclusions -- 5. Internet Service Provider Liability -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The rise and consolidation of the "safe harbor" doctrine -- 5.2.1 The US system: Section 230 CDA -- 5.2.2 Secondary liability: Another road? -- 5.3 The legal regime of online intermediaries within the EU: The e-Commerce Directive -- 5.4 European courts and online intermediaries -- 5.4.1 Case law from the European Court of Justice -- 5.4.2 Case law from the European Court of Human Rights -- 5.4.3 National case law: The example of Italy 5.5 Data protection and liability of online intermediaries -- 5.6 Toward a new regulatory framework: The DSA proposal -- 5.7 Conclusions -- 6. Hate Speech and Disinformation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Hate speech across the Atlantic -- 6.2.1 Hate speech in the US First Amendment case law -- 6.2.2 Hate speech in the case law of the ECtHR -- 6.2.3 Tackling hate speech at the EU level -- 6.2.4 Tackling terrorist content in the EU: The TERREG Regulation -- 6.3 Online disinformation -- 6.3.1 Defining disinformation -- 6.3.2 EU policies against disinformation -- 6.4 A comparative overview of domestic legislations -- 6.4.1 Germany -- 6.4.2 Italy -- 6.4.3 France -- 6.4.4 The cases of Russia, Singapore and Malaysia -- 6.5 Conclusions -- 7. Copyright in the Digital Age -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The birth of a "pan-European" Internet copyright law: InfoSoc Directive -- 7.2.1 The rights over works and other subject matter: Content, limitations and exceptions -- 7.2.2 The notion of "communication to the public" and the intervention of the ECJ -- 7.3 The new DSM Copyright Directive -- 7.3.1 The new rules on limitations and exceptions -- 7.3.2 Online content-sharing service providers and the "value gap" provision of art. 17 -- 7.3.3 The case of Poland v. Parliament and Council on the annulment of art. 17 -- 7.4 Copyright and freedom of expression in the case law of the European courts -- 7.5 The administrative enforcement of copyright: The examples of Italy and France -- 7.6 Conclusions -- 8. Audiovisual Media Services -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 From broadcasting to audiovisual media services -- 8.3 The AVMSD Refit and the new notion of video-sharing platform services -- 8.4 The "country-of-origin" principle and the rules on jurisdiction -- 8.5 The rules on content -- 8.5.1 The rules on audiovisual commercial communication 8.5.2 The regulation on harmful content: Notably, the protection of minors and the prohibition of hate speech and terrorist content -- 8.5.3 Other rules for the pursuit of public interests -- 8.6 Promotion and prominence of European works on non-linear services -- 8.7 The rules on video-sharing platform services: Focus on article 28b -- 8.8 Conclusions -- Part III - Privacy and Data Protection -- 9. The Right to Privacy and Data Protection -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The right to privacy and to data protection -- 9.2.1 The right to privacy and the right to data protection: A legal definition -- 9.3 The judicial consolidation of the right to privacy -- 9.4 The evolution of privacy and data protection in Europe -- 9.4.1 The evolution of privacy and data protection under the case law of the ECtHR -- 9.5 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union -- 9.5.1 The right to privacy and data protection in the Union under the lenses of the ECJ -- 9.6 Conclusions -- 10. The General Data Protection Regulation -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Material and territorial scope -- 10.2.1 Data controller -- 10.2.2 Data processor -- 10.2.3 Territorial scope -- 10.3 General principles -- 10.4 Legal bases -- 10.4.1 Consent -- 10.4.2 Other legal bases -- 10.5 Data subjects' rights -- 10.5.1 Right of access -- 10.5.2 Right to rectification -- 10.5.3 Right to erasure -- 10.5.4 Right to restriction of processing -- 10.5.5 Right to data portability -- 10.5.6 Right to object -- 10.5.7 Automated individual decision-making, including profiling -- 10.6 Obligations under the GDPR -- 10.6.1 Records of processing activities -- 10.6.2 Security measures related to processing -- 10.6.3 Data breach -- 10.6.4 Data protection impact assessment and prior consultation -- 10.6.5 Appointment of a data protection officer -- 10.7 Transfer of personal data -- 10.8 Authorities and sanctions 10.9 Conclusions -- 11. Privacy, Identity and the Right to Be Forgotten -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Privacy and digital identity -- 11.3 The right to be forgotten (or the right to erasure) -- 11.3.1 The traditional definition of the right to be forgotten -- 11.3.2 The right to be forgotten on the Internet -- 11.4 Google Spain (C-131/12) and the framing of the right to be forgotten in the digital age -- 11.4.1 Facts of the case and Advocate General opinion -- 11.4.2 To erase or not to erase? The ECJ reasoning -- 11.5 The aftermath of Google Spain -- 11.5.1 Article 17 of the General Data Protection Regulation -- 11.5.2 The territorial scope of the right to erasure -- 11.6 Conclusions -- 12. Transfer of Personal Data -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Personal data transfers according to the GDPR -- 12.2.1 Adequacy decisions -- 12.2.2 Appropriate safeguards -- 12.2.3 Derogations -- 12.3 The Schrems saga -- 12.3.1 Schrems I -- 12.3.2 Schrems II -- 12.4 Recent developments -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 13. Data Retention and Law Enforcement -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 First challenges to data retention -- 13.3 Data retention after Digital Rights Ireland -- 13.4 Law Enforcement Directive -- 13.4.1 Material scope -- 13.4.2 Principles of data processing -- 13.4.3 Logging -- 13.4.4 Transfers of personal data to third countries or international organizations -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References |
title | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_auth | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_exact_search | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_exact_search_txtP | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_full | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_fullStr | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_full_unstemmed | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_short | Internet Law and Protection of Fundamental Rights |
title_sort | internet law and protection of fundamental rights |
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