Digital data collection and information privacy law

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Digital data collection and information privacy law

Mark Burdon

(Cambridge intellectual property and information law)

Cambridge University Press, 2022, c2020

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 299-313) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Digital Data Collection and Information Privacy Law, Mark Burdon argues for the reformulation of information privacy law to regulate new power consequences of ubiquitous data collection. Examining developing business models, based on collections of sensor data - with a focus on the 'smart home' - Burdon demonstrates the challenges that are arising for information privacy's control-model and its application of principled protections of personal information exchange. By reformulating information privacy's primary role of individual control as an interrupter of modulated power, Burdon provides a foundation for future law reform and calls for stronger information privacy law protections. This book should be read by anyone interested in the role of privacy in a world of ubiquitous and pervasive data collection.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I. The Collected World: 2. The smart world is the collected world
  • 3. The smart home: a collected target
  • 4. Commercialising the collected
  • Part II. Information Privacy Law's Concepts and Applications: 5. What information privacy protects
  • 6. How information privacy law protects
  • Part III. Information Privacy Law for a Collected Future: 7. Collected challenges
  • 8. Conceptualising the collected
  • 9. Using information privacy law to interrupt modulation
  • 10. A smart, collected or modulated world?

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