Transparency 2.0 : digital data and privacy in a wired world
著者
書誌事項
Transparency 2.0 : digital data and privacy in a wired world
(Communication law, v. 3)
Peter Lang, c2014
- : hbk
大学図書館所蔵 全1件
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Transparency 2.0 investigates a host of emerging issues around the collision of information and personal privacy in a digital world. Delving into the key legal concepts of information access and privacy, such as practical obscurity, the U.S. Supreme Court's central purpose test, and Europe's
emerging concept of the "right to be forgotten", contributors examine issues regarding online access to court records, social media, access to email, and complications from massive government data dumps by Wikileaks, Edward Snowden, and others. They offer solutions to resolving conflict and look to the future as a new generation learns to live in an open digital world where the line between information and privacy blurs ever faster. This book is ideal for anyone interested in the legal battlefield over access and privacy, as well as for classes in the law of the media and First Amendment, privacy, journalism, and public affairs.
目次
Contents: Sigman L. Splichal: The 'Practical Obscurity' Doctrine: When Is a Public Record Too Public? - Martin E. Halstuk/Benjamin W. Cramer/Michael D. Todd: Tipping the Scales: How the U.S. Supreme Court Eviscerated Freedom of Information in Favor of Privacy - Joey Senat: Public Access and Informational Privacy in Electronic Government Databases - Cheryl Ann Bishop: Conflict in a Digital World: The European Context - Richard J. Peltz-Steele: Electronic Court Record Access: Present Landscape, Neutral Principles, and the Looming Interloper of Contextual Privacy - Derigan Silver: Social Media and Reporting on Judicial Proceedings: A Digital Era Conflict - Kyu Ho Youm: Access to Email and the Right of Privacy in the Workplace - Jonathan Peters: All the News That's Fit to Leak - Daxton R. "Chip" Stewart: Finding Resolution: Systems for Resolving Disputes and Reconciling Access with Privacy - Paul Gates: Here's Looking at Me: The Abandonment of Privacy and Solitude as Millennials Move to Life Online.
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