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The question of governance of the Internet is increasing in
significance. The United Nations' World Summit on the Information
Society, held in two phases in 2003 and 2005, provoked heated
debate, and the resultant meetings of the Internet Governance Forum
that followed this have been the subject of growing public and
media interest. Yet governance of the Internet is multifaceted,
complex, and far from transparent, and there has been little
written about the subject which is detailed, systematic, and
non-polemical.
This book focuses on the issues involved in the ongoing development
of Internet governance, and the challenges associated with
developing and applying governance structures at a global level
based on bottom-up, consensus-seeking decision-making procedures,
without direct foundation in a treaty frame-work. Leading academics
and practitioners studying and working in the area of Internet
governance explore such issues as how the engineering of
infrastructure matters, how legitimacy is gained and retained by
governance organizations, and whether elements of such
organizations can provide a model for other organizations to
emulate. They examine the tensions inherent in Internet governance,
such as government control versus digital libertarianism;
commercialism versus civil society ideals; interests of developed
countries versus interests of developing countries.
The book will be of interest to academics, researchers, and
students of Information and Communications Technology, legal
aspects of ICT, and Organization Studies, as well as legal
practitioners, government bodies, NGOs, and others concerned with
Internet governance.
This book presents a transnational and transsystemic perspective on
the role of contract in Internet Governance, and considers
parameters for assessing the utility and legitimacy of contracts in
this context. Bygrave presents definitions and parameters of
internet governance and the role of contract alongside examples of
how these are used in the ever-changing internet world. He examines
topical and well-known mediums such as Facebook in relation to
their policies and online parameters. Taking into account legal
developments across jurisdictions and within both common law and
civil law systems, Bygrave explores the idea of the contract as the
principal means of governing the virtual world.
FREE Update to Selected Commentaries This new book provides an
article-by-article commentary on the new EU General Data Protection
Regulation. Adopted in April 2016 and applicable from May 2018, the
GDPR is the centrepiece of the recent reform of the EU regulatory
framework for protection of personal data. It replaces the 1995 EU
Data Protection Directive and has become the most significant piece
of data protection legislation anywhere in the world. This book is
edited by three leading authorities and written by a team of expert
specialists in the field from around the EU and representing
different sectors (including academia, the EU institutions, data
protection authorities, and the private sector), thus providing a
pan-European analysis of the GDPR. It examines each article of the
GDPR in sequential order and explains how its provisions work, thus
allowing the reader to easily and quickly elucidate the meaning of
individual articles. An introductory chapter provides an overview
of the background to the GDPR and its place in the greater
structure of EU law and human rights law. Account is also taken of
closely linked legal instruments, such as the Directive on Data
Protection and Law Enforcement that was adopted concurrently with
the GDPR, and of the ongoing work on the proposed new E-Privacy
Regulation.
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