
The Regulation of Digital Technologies in the EU
Description
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This book identifies three phenomena which are common to all EU digital technologies-relevant regulatory initiatives: act-ification, GDPR mimesis, and regulatory brutality. These three phenomena serve as indicators or early signs of a new European technology law-making paradigm that now seems ready to emerge. They divulge new-found confidence on the part of the EU digital technologies legislator, who has now asserted for itself the right to form policy options and create new rules in the field for all of Europe.
Bringing together an analysis of the regulatory initiatives for the management of technology topics in the EU for the first time, this book will be of interest to academics, policymakers, and practitioners, sparking academic and policymaking interest and discussion.
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Persons
Paul de Hert is Professor at the Faculty of Law & Criminology at the VUB and an associate professor at the Law School/Tilburg Institute for Law and Technology (TILT), University of Tilburg. He is Director of the VUB's Research Group on Human Rights, Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Law & Criminology, and a former director of the LSTS and of the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Law.
Content
List of abbreviations viii
1 Introduction 1
PART 1
The change of paradigm in the EU's regulation of digital technologies: 'act-ification' at play 13
2 Popular names instead of alphanumeric titles for EU laws regulating digital technologies 15
3 The titles of EU legal acts 22
4 Is act-ification useful? 28
PART 2
'GDPR mimesis' in (all?) EU regulatory initiatives related to digital technologies 39
5 'GDPR mimesis': has the success of the GDPR dulled the EU legislator's imagination? 41
6 The EU data protection model and its embodiment in the GDPR 54
7 Is GDPR mimesis useful for the regulation of digital technologies? 64
PART 3
The 'brutality' of EU legislation on new digital technologies 71
8 The 'regulatory brutality' of EU law when regulating digital technologies 73
9 Basic principles of EU law and the regulation of digital technologies 85
10 Why is regulatory brutality a problem when regulating digital technologies in the EU? 95
PART 4
A new paradigm for EU law 105
11 The current reality of digital technologies in Europe 107
12 The European way for the digital age 120
Index 135
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