Legal Challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution

Legal Challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution

The European Union's Digital Strategy

Chen, Chen; Moura Vicente, Dario; de Vasconcelos Casimiro, Sofia

Springer International Publishing AG

08/2024

355

Mole

9783031405181

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction.- Part I - Content.- The Legal Challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Copyright in the Digital Single Market - between new uses of protected content and fairness considerations.- Due diligence obligations and liability of intermediary services: the Proposal for the EU Digital Services Act.- Legal challenges posed by the modern-day transportation services. A brief overview from the private law perspective.- The regulation of content moderation.- Part II - Economy.- The European Way to Regulate Big Tech: the EU's Digital Markets Act.- "eCommerce and EU consumers' rights".- Online platforms and taxes in the EU: a compatible match?.- Regulating Digital Advertising from the Perspective of the 4th Industrial Revolution.- Part III - Security.- The European Union Strategy for Cybersecurity.- Remarks on the use of biometric data systems (and facial recognition technologies) for law enforcement purposes: security implications of the Proposal for an EU Regulation on Artificial Intelligence.- Cyber operations threatening the European Union and its member states: the rise of the European Union as a cyber defence actor.- Part IV - People.- Data Protection Litigation System under the GDPR.- R2D: The Right to Disconnect from Work.- Is There a Need for an EU Catalogue of Fundamental Digital Rights?.- Countering terrorism propaganda online through TERREG and DSA: a battlefield or a breath of hope for our fundamental human rights?.- AI and Fundamental Rights: the People, the Conversations, and the Governance Challenges.
Digital strategy;Digital single market;Digital Markets Act;Artificial intelligence;Online platforms;E-commerce;Cloud computing;Cybercrime;Cyber defence;Right to disconnect;Online freedom of expression;Digital Services Act;Content filtering;Disinformation;Collaborative consumption;Consumers' rights;Digital advertising;Cybersecurity;Data protection;Digital human rights