Internet privacy rights : rights to protect autonomy / Paul Bernal.
2014
K3264.C65 B49 2014 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Internet privacy rights : rights to protect autonomy / Paul Bernal.
Published
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Call Number
K3264.C65 B49 2014
ISBN
9781107042735 (hardback)
1107042739 (hardback)
1107042739 (hardback)
Description
xii, 311 pages ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)863100788
Summary
"Internet Privacy Rights analyses the current threats to our online autonomy and privacy and proposes a new model for the gathering, retention and use of personal data. Key to the model is the development of specific privacy rights: a right to roam the Internet with privacy, a right to monitor the monitors, a right to delete personal data and a right to create, assert and protect an online identity. These rights could help in the formulation of more effective and appropriate legislation, and shape more privacy-friendly business models. The conclusion examines how the Internet might look with these rights in place and whether such an Internet could be sustainable from both a governmental and a business perspective"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 291-299) and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Silver Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Silver Fund
Table of Contents
Preface and acknowledgements
ix
1.
Internet privacy rights
1
1.
Introduction
1
2.
Privacy and autonomy on the internet
12
3.
Internet privacy rights
15
4.
The impact of internet privacy rights
19
5.
A privacy-friendly future?
22
2.
Privacy, autonomy and the internet
24
1.
Autonomy
24
2.
Privacy
32
3.
Autonomy and consent
36
4.
Autonomy, privacy, challenges and criticisms
42
5.
Privacy is not the enemy
50
3.
The Symbiotic Web
53
1.
The Symbiotic Web
53
2.
The make-up of the benign symbiosis
60
3.
The risks of a malign symbiosis
65
4.
Governments and the Symbiotic Web
73
5.
Managing the symbiosis
77
4.
Law, privacy and the internet - the landscape
82
1.
The role of law in the internet
82
2.
Privacy-protective law
87
3.
Privacy-invasive law
97
4.
Privacy-related law: the overall landscape
111
5.
Navigating the internet
117
1.
Search engines and their role
117
2.
Google and the Article 29 Working Party
122
3.
Implications and ways forward
131
4.
Conclusions and rights-based solutions
139
6.
Behavioural tracking
144
1.
Behavioural tracking and targeting
144
2.
Does any of this matter? Isn't it just about advertising?
147
3.
Phorm
151
4.
The rise and fall of Phorm
160
5.
Regulation of behavioural tracking
166
6.
Ways forward and rights-based solutions
172
7.
Data vulnerability and the right to delete
176
1.
Vulnerability and autonomy
176
2.
The reality of data vulnerability
181
3.
Data vulnerability -- solutions?
197
4.
A change in assumptions and the right to delete
200
8.
A rights-based approach
207
1.
Putting the rights together
207
2.
Autonomy by design
215
3.
A rights-based approach?
223
4.
Rights and symbiotic regulation
230
9.
Privacy and identity
234
1.
Online identity
234
2.
The privacy, identity, anonymity model
237
3.
The concept and creation of identity
240
4.
The assertion of identity
247
5.
The protection of online identity
250
6.
Identity in a privacy-friendly internet
259
10.
A privacy-friendly future?
263
1.
A need for internet privacy rights?
263
2.
An internet with rights
269
3.
The internet of the future and addressing critiques
278
4.
A transparent society or a privacy-friendly future?
283
Bibliography
291
Index
300