, to see if you have full access to this publication.
Edited Book No access

Confidentiality in a Digital World

A Contradiction in Terms?
Editors:
Publisher:
 2024

Summary

The unceasing digital progress brings about far-reaching upheavals for the law of confidentiality, data secrecy, and security of information. This volume fathoms the role of law in ensuring, contriving, and balancing confidentiality against the trend towards transparency that European legislation has witnessed in recent years. By bringing together related debates in different sub-disciplines of private law which are (too) often considered in isolation, the book identifies recurring themes, common lines of argument, and the key challenges in upholding confidentiality in the digital age. With contributions byPD Dr. Michael Denga, LL.M., Maître en Droit | Dr. Max Dregelies | Anastasiya Kiseleva, LL.M. | PD Dr. David Kucg | Jun.- Prof. Dr. Lea Katharina Kumkar | Dr. Cristina M. Mariottini | PD Dr. Julian Rapp, LL.M. (Cambridge) | Mariya Serafimova | Prof. Dr. Wiebke Voß, LL.M. (Cambridge)

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2024
ISBN-Print
978-3-7560-0238-2
ISBN-Online
978-3-7489-3765-4
Publisher
Nomos, Baden-Baden
Language
English
Pages
182
Product type
Edited Book

Table of contents

ChapterPages
  1. Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis No access Pages 1 - 8
  2. Abbreviations No access Pages 9 - 16
  3. Index of Directives, Regulations and Conventions No access Pages 17 - 18
    1. Wiebke Voß, Lea Katharina Kumkar
      1. I. Introduction No access
        1. 1. Fundamental rights to privacy and confidentiality No access
        2. 2. Confidentiality in EU law No access
      2. III. Transparency – confidentiality’s antagonist in the digital age? No access
      3. IV. Outlook: a balancing exercise No access
    2. David Kuch
        1. 1. Three Sources of Privacy and Confidentiality Protection No access
        2. 2. Two Senses of Confidentiality No access
        3. 3. Summary No access
        1. 1. The Internet as Stimulant for an Explosion of Data Protection Law No access
        2. 2. Social Media as Habitat for Relations of Confidentiality? No access
    1. Mariya Serafimova
        1. 1. The special nature of digital ecosystems No access
        2. 2. Access to data as an asset No access
        3. 3. Necessity for new rules No access
        1. 1. The essential facility doctrine No access
        2. 2. Data access under the DMA No access
        1. 1. General balancing of interests No access
        2. 2. Reconciling competition law and privacy concerns No access
        3. 3. Practical parameters for data access No access
      1. IV. Concluding remarks No access
    2. Michael Denga
        1. I. Obstacles to Data Sharing No access
        2. II. ‘Good’ Data Intermediation No access
        1. I. Misleading Metaphors for Data Intermediation No access
          1. 1. Data Intermediation Services No access
          2. 2. Supervision and Material Rules for Data Intermediation No access
          1. 1. Pooling and clearing No access
          2. 2. Limits of data law No access
        1. I. Relevant Considerations No access
          1. 1. Supervisory Board and Advisory Board No access
          2. 2. DPO and CCO No access
          1. 1. Participation No access
          2. 2. Dispute resolution mechanisms No access
          3. 3. Distribution control No access
          1. 1. Example of Collecting Societies No access
          2. 2. Centrepiece of the Management Contract No access
          3. 3. Representation in the Trust No access
          1. 1. Example of Patent Pools No access
          2. 2. Integration in the Trust Company No access
      1. D. Conclusion No access
    3. Anastasiya Kiseleva
      1. I. Introduction No access
        1. 1. Transparency in the EC Proposal for the AI Act No access
        2. 2. Confidentiality in the EC Proposal for the AI Act No access
        3. 3. The EC Proposal for the AI Act: Transparency AND Confidentiality No access
        1. 1. Transparency in the GDPR No access
        2. 2. Confidentiality in the GDPR No access
        3. 3. Transparency AND Confidentiality in the GDPR No access
      2. IV. Confidence and Accountability: the Key Words for Both Confidentiality and Transparency No access
      3. V. Conclusion No access
    1. Max Dregelies
      1. A. Introduction No access
        1. I. General requirements No access
          1. 1. Basic exclusion No access
          2. 2. Commercial Value No access
          3. 3. Rewarding performance No access
          4. 4. Legal consequence No access
          5. 5. Interim conclusion No access
        2. III. Social information No access
        3. IV. Interim conclusion No access
      2. C. Protection under the GDPR No access
          1. 1. Appropriate confidentiality measures No access
            1. a) Appropriate confidentiality measure No access
            2. b) T&C review No access
          2. 3. Interim conclusion No access
        1. II. Additional contractual protection No access
      3. E. Conclusion/Theses No access
    2. Julian Rapp
      1. I. Why confidentiality in arbitration proceedings? No access
        1. 1. Explicit agreement No access
        2. 2. Arbitration rules No access
        3. 3. National case law No access
        1. 1. Existence of proceedings No access
        2. 2. Documents No access
        3. 3. Hearings No access
        4. 4. Arbitral Award No access
        5. 5. Remedies No access
        1. 1. Arbitrators and arbitration institutions No access
        2. 2. Counsel No access
          1. a) Experts No access
          2. b) Witnesses No access
          3. c) Other No access
      2. V. Exceptions No access
      3. VI. Conclusion No access
    3. Cristina M. Mariottini
      1. I. Introductory Remarks No access
        1. A. Privacy Claims: Notions and Underlying Interests No access
            1. a. The place of conduct: The place towards which the publication is ‘principally directed’ No access
            2. b. The place of conduct: The exclusion of the ‘mosaic principle’ No access
          1. 2. The Defendant’s Habitual Residence No access
        2. C. Agreements as to Jurisdiction No access
          1. 1. Escape Clause No access
          2. 2. Party Autonomy and Applicable Law No access
          3. 3. Public Policy and Overriding Mandatory Rules No access
        3. E. A System for Interim Relief No access
        1. A. Harmonisation of the Grounds of Direct and Indirect Jurisdiction No access
          1. 1. ‘Precluded’ Grounds of Indirect Jurisdiction No access
          2. 2. Balancing Privacy and Freedom of Expression: Public Policy as a Ground for Refusal of Recognition and Enforcement No access
          3. 3. Punitive Damages No access
      2. IV. Concluding Remarks No access
  4. Contributors No access Pages 181 - 182

Similar publications

from the topics "European Law & International Law & Comparative Law"
Cover of book: Der Volkseinwand
Book Titles No access
Florian Feigl
Der Volkseinwand
Cover of book: Wie fördert die EU Menschenrechte in Drittstaaten?
Book Titles No access
Dennis Traudt
Wie fördert die EU Menschenrechte in Drittstaaten?
Cover of book: Future-Proofing in Public Law
Edited Book No access
Nicole Koblenz LL.M., Nicholas Otto, Gernot Sydow
Future-Proofing in Public Law