This book explores the complexity and depths of our digital world by providing a selection of analyses and discussions from the 16th annual international conference on Computers, Privacy and Data Protection (CPDP): Ideas that Drive Our Digital World.
The first half of the book focuses on issues related to the GDPR and data. These chapters provide a critical analysis of the 5-year history of the complex GDPR enforcement system; on codes of conduct as a potential co-regulation instrument for the market; an interdisciplinary approach to privacy assessment on synthetic data; the ethical implications of secondary use of publicly available personal data; and automating technologies and GDPR compliance.
The second half of the book shifts focus to novel issues and ideas that drive our digital world. The chapters offer analyses on social and environmental sustainability of smart cities; reconstructing states as information platforms; stakeholder identification using the example of video-based Active and Assisted Living (AAL); and a human-centred approach to dark patterns.
This interdisciplinary book invites readers to an intellectual journey into a wide range of issues and cutting-edge ideas to tackle our ever-evolving digital landscape.
Muu info
A new volume in the Computers, Privacy and Data Protection series collecting a selection of papers from the 16th CPDP Conference (2023).
Preface
1. Five Years of GDPR: Lessons for Procedures, Agencies and Powers, Herwig C
H Hofmann (University of Luxembourg) and Lisette Mustert (Utrecht University,
the Netherlands)
2. Codes of Conduct: A Credible Instrument of Co-regulation for the Market,
Stavroula Chatzipanagioti (Selbstregulierung Informationswirtschaft e.V.,
Germany)
3. Measuring Privacy Protection in Structured Synthetic Datasets: A Survey,
Daniele Panfilo (Aindo, Italy), Alexander T.P. Boudewijn (Aindo, Italy),
Andrea Filippo Ferraris (University of Bologna, Italy), Vanessa Cocca
(Bocconi University Italy), Sabrina Zinutti (Aindo, Italy), Karel De Schepper
(Belgium) and Carlo Rossi Chauvenet (Bocconi University Italy)
4. Are Publicly Available (Personal) Data 'up for grabs? A Discussion of
Three Privacy Agreements, Elisa Orrù (University of Freiburg, Germany)
5. GDPR Compliance on Autopilot: Checks and Balances of Automated Compliance
of Subject Access Requests, Desara Dushi (Vrije Universiteit Brussel,
Belgium)
6. (Evil) Twin Transition? Questioning the Social and Environmental
Sustainability of Smart Cities in the European Union, Alessandra Calvi (Vrije
Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
7. States as Information Platforms: A Political Theory of Information,
Vagelis Papakonstantinou (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
8. How to Solve the Dark Pattern Issue: A Human-Centred Approach, Marie
Potel-Saville and Mathilde Da Rocha (Fair Patterns, France)
9. Who Should We Care About in the Digital World? Challenges of Stakeholders
Identification The Case Study of AAL, Maksymilian Michal Kuzmicz (Stockholm
University, Sweden)
10. 'Protecting Privacy on a Continuous Orbit': Closing Remarks at the
Computers, Privacy and Data Protection Conference, Wojciech Wiewiórowski
(European Data Protection Supervisor, Poland)
Hideyuki Matsumi is a doctoral researcher at Law Science, Technology and Society (LSTS), Belgium. Dara Hallinan is a legal academic at FIZ Karlsruhe, Germany. Diana Dimitrova is a post-doctoral researcher at FIZ Karlsruhe, Germany. Eleni Kosta is Professor of Technology Law and Human Rights at Tilburg University, the Netherlands. Paul De Hert is Professor of Law at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.