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The Internet has brought about unprecedented changes to modern
life, creating a connected society but also radically opening up
the question of how to design and apply legal rules in a digital
world. This thoroughly revised second edition provides an updated
exploration of the latest developments and controversies in
European Internet law. Paying close attention to recent acts and
proposals, including the Digital Services Act (DSA), Digital
Markets Act (DMA), AI Act and others, this Research Handbook traces
the developments of main regulatory ideas; provides criticism of
the methods, principles, approaches and enforcement; and gives a
critical analysis of the normative side of regulation. The expert
contributors are clustered around the main regulatory fields and
each deals adeptly with one or more of the key features of the
passed or proposed acts. Providing a critical analysis of the
EU’s regulatory efforts in digital regulation, this discerning
Research Handbook will be a useful reference tool for academics and
postgraduate students specialising in international law,
e-commerce, consumer law and IT law. It will also be of interest to
practitioners, including governmental officials and data protection
officers.
This extensively revised and updated third edition of EU Internet
Law offers a state of the art overview of the key areas of EU
Internet regulation, as well as a critical evaluation of EU
policy-making and governance in the field. It provides an in-depth
analysis of the ways in which relevant legal instruments interact,
as well as comparative discussions contrasting EU and US solutions.
Examining the constitutional context within which the Internet is
regulated, and the policies that have informed this regulation over
the years, Andrej Savin explores recent policy documents on illegal
and harmful content online, communications on platforms and the
2020 Digital Single Market strategy, as well as further
developments in the case law of the Court of Justice of the
European Union. He also investigates key issues such as electronic
commerce, jurisdiction, content regulation, intellectual property,
consumer protection, criminal regulation, and recent developments
in GDPR. This third edition of EU Internet Law will be a crucial
read for academics, students, and practitioners working at the
intersections of the Internet, technology, and commercial, economic
and information law across the EU and beyond.
This extensively revised and updated third edition of EU Internet
Law offers a state of the art overview of the key areas of EU
Internet regulation, as well as a critical evaluation of EU
policy-making and governance in the field. It provides an in-depth
analysis of the ways in which relevant legal instruments interact,
as well as comparative discussions contrasting EU and US solutions.
Examining the constitutional context within which the Internet is
regulated, and the policies that have informed this regulation over
the years, Andrej Savin explores recent policy documents on illegal
and harmful content online, communications on platforms and the
2020 Digital Single Market strategy, as well as further
developments in the case law of the Court of Justice of the
European Union. He also investigates key issues such as electronic
commerce, jurisdiction, content regulation, intellectual property,
consumer protection, criminal regulation, and recent developments
in GDPR. This third edition of EU Internet Law will be a crucial
read for academics, students, and practitioners working at the
intersections of the Internet, technology, and commercial, economic
and information law across the EU and beyond.
EU Telecommunications Law provides a comprehensive overview of the
current European regulatory framework as it applies to
telecommunications and examines the challenges facing regulators in
this sector. Key chapters focus on the selection of appropriate
regulatory models that serve to encourage effective investment in
next-generation networks and ensure their successful deployment.
Andrej Savin provides an up to date overview of all the relevant
sources, guiding the reader through these disparate materials in a
simple and systematized way. In particular, the book provides
analysis of the 2016 proposal for a European Electronic
Communications Code (EECC). Using the 2009 Regulatory Framework on
electronic communications as a basis the author analyses each of
the 2009 framework?s five main directives, comparing them with the
changes proposed in the EECC. Providing a comprehensive
introduction to the main areas of EU telecoms regulation, this book
will be of great value to telecoms and IT lawyers. It will also
appeal to academics carrying out research in IT law or competition
law as it relates to IT and telecoms.
EU Telecommunications Law provides a comprehensive overview of the
current European regulatory framework as it applies to
telecommunications and examines the challenges facing regulators in
this sector. Key chapters focus on the selection of appropriate
regulatory models that serve to encourage effective investment in
next-generation networks and ensure their successful deployment.
Andrej Savin provides an up to date overview of all the relevant
sources, guiding the reader through these disparate materials in a
simple and systematized way. In particular, the book provides
analysis of the 2016 proposal for a European Electronic
Communications Code (EECC). Using the 2009 Regulatory Framework on
electronic communications as a basis the author analyses each of
the 2009 framework?s five main directives, comparing them with the
changes proposed in the EECC. Providing a comprehensive
introduction to the main areas of EU telecoms regulation, this book
will be of great value to telecoms and IT lawyers. It will also
appeal to academics carrying out research in IT law or competition
law as it relates to IT and telecoms.
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