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"Internet Privacy Rights analyses the current threats to our online autonomy and privacy and proposes a new model for the gathering, retention and use of personal data. Key to the model is the development of specific privacy rights: a right to roam the Internet with privacy, a right to monitor the monitors, a right to delete personal data and a right to create, assert and protect an online identity. These rights could help in the formulation of more effective and appropriate legislation, and shape more privacy-friendly business models. The conclusion examines how the Internet might look with these rights in place and whether such an Internet could be sustainable from both a governmental and a business perspective"--
List of contents
1. Internet privacy rights; 2. Privacy, autonomy and the internet; 3. The symbiotic Web; 4. Law, privacy and the internet: the landscape; 5. Navigating the internet; 6. Behavioural tracking; 7. Data vulnerability and the right to delete; 8. A rights-based approach; 9. Privacy and identity; 10. A privacy-friendly future?
About the author
Paul Bernal is a Lecturer in Information Technology, Intellectual Property and Media Law at the University of East Anglia Law School, where his research centres around privacy and human rights, particularly on the internet.