As digital technologies and models propel data to the centre of economic and social experience, new EU directives, regulations, legislative proposals, and policy strategies attempt to deal with the unprecedented challenges that come in the wake of digital expansion. Yet it remains to be seen whether such initiatives will prove adequate. This important and much-needed book looks at the main regulatory initiatives taken by the EU legislature on digital markets, with a particular focus on features affecting the individual users, mostly consumers.
With detailed attention to all relevant EU legal instruments, the authors - three well-known authorities on the intersection of technology and law - offer in-depth analyses of such legal aspects of digitisation as the following:content moderation and transparency;
maintaining democratic control of societies vis-à-vis dominant large digital platforms;
conditions under which public sector bodies may access private sector data;
digital identities and their protection, including the so-called digital wallet;
risk-based classification of artificial intelligence systems; and
rethinking the consumer protection regime to reconcile the needs of new markets and the protection of its consumer users.
We publiceren alleen reviews die voldoen aan de voorwaarden voor reviews. Bekijk onze voorwaarden voor reviews.