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Data Protection, Privacy and Artificial Intelligence, Volume 18 : The World Is Watching.

Bloomsbury Collections: Hart Publishing 2026 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Breuer, Jonas, editor.
De Hert, Paul, editor.
Hallinan, Dara, editor.
Roussos, Manos, editor.
Series:
Computers, Privacy and Data Protection.
Computers, Privacy and Data Protection
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Artificial intelligence--Law and legislation.
Artificial intelligence.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (303 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
Distribution:
London : Bloomsbury Publishing (UK), 2026.
Place of Publication:
London : Hart Publishing, 2026.
System Details:
text file rdaft
Summary:
Provides insights from the 2025 CPDP.ai international conference, where leading scholars, policy makers, and practitioners examine how Europe's fast-evolving digital frameworks shape global debates.
Contents:
Intro
Preface
Contents
Contributors
PART 1: INTRODUCTION
1. The World is Watching: Perception, Opacity, and the More-than-Human in Surveillance Societies
I. The More-than-Human Gaze: Perception Beyond the Human
II. Opacity, Power, and the Crisis of Democratic Agency
III. Conclusion: Re-imagining Perception, Reclaiming Agency
Bibliography
2. A Defining Moment for the EU: Geo-economics, Data Protection, and AI
I. Law and Economics
II. The Constitution of Economic Markets
III. Geo-economics, National, and International Law
IV. The Ideology of AGI
V. The EU Approach to AI as a Normal Technology
VI. Finals
PART 2: ACADEMIC INSIGHTS
3. Navigating Disruption: The Case of the European AI Act
I. Introduction
II. Disruption
III. The AI Act Revisited
IV. The AI Act under Deregulatory Pressure
V. Outlook
4. Embedding Proportionality in the Fundamental Rights Impact Assessment
II. The FRIA in the AI Act
III. From Theory to Practice: A Proposal for Implementing the FRIA Framework
IV. Fundamental Rights Impact Evaluation: The Proportionality Assessment
V. LoanLens: A Testing Ground Use Case
VI. Conclusion
5. Navigating Transparency Obligations for Companion Chatbots under the European Union AI Act: Evaluation and Policy Directions
II. Literature Review
III. AI Companionship and the Transparency Requirements for Interactive AI Systems
IV. Policy Directions and Recommendations
V. Conclusion
6. Watching the Watchers: Health Data, Artificial Intelligence, and the Transatlantic Rebalancing of Privacy Power
II. The EU ' s Rights-Based Model
III. The US Enforcement-Centric Model
IV. Rebalancing Through a Transatlantic Duty of Loyalty.
V. Conclusion: ' The World is Watching '
7. Call for a Brussels-Sacramento Alliance on AI Privacy
II. The Current EU-US DPF and its Predecessors: From Safe Harbour to EU-US Privacy Framework
III. The Role of Personal Data in AI Systems
IV. The California Approach to AI Risk Regulation
V. The Brussels-Sacramento Approach as a Lawmaking Alliance
VI. Conclusions
8. Technical Standards: Co-Regulatory Pathways of Digital Policymaking for Artificial Intelligence
II. Background: Technical Standardisation in the EU AI Act
III. Technical Standards for AI Regulation in the United States
IV. Conclusion
9. Transitioning from Portability in the GDPR to Access in the Data Act: A Multidisciplinary Analysis of Data Access by Design
II. Data Access by Design: Transitioning from Access and Portability to Access and Shareability
III. Data Access Process Models
IV. Technical Components in the Data Act DAP
V. General Observations and Implications
Acknowledgements
PART 3: PRACTITIONERS' CORNER
10. Unlocking DPO Happiness: Strategies for C-Level Executives and DPOs
I. Promoting Role Clarity
II. Embedding DPO Independence into Organisational Structures
III. Cultivating Continuous Learning and Adaptation
IV. Fostering Cooperation
V. Ensuring Adequate Resources
VI. Reflection
VII. Conclusion
11. Empirical Methods for Supervising Algorithmic Profiling Systems: Assessment Protocol for Examining Indirect Discrimination
II. The Open Legal Norm: Who is Responsible for Interpretation ?
III. Empirical Methods
IV. Assessment Protocol for Competent Authorities
Bibliography.
12. Quo Vadis GDPR? Ex Orco Usque ad Coelum: A Call to Fundamentally Reshape GDPR Enforcement Mechanics
I. A Fundamental GDPR (Enforcement) Reshape: Attraction or Attrition ?
II. What is not Working ? The Misfortune of the Consent or Pay Peplum Says it All
III. A Brief Overview of What We have: The Myth of Perfect Enforcement versus the Flurry of Legal Theories
Appendix 1. Digital Laws Enforcement Models
PART 4: EDPS CLOSING REMARKS
13. The World is Watching
Index.
ISBN:
1-5099-9315-0
1-5099-9313-4
1-5099-9314-2
OCLC:
1583182504

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