Read more
List of contents
1. Privacy in the IoT World; 2. IoT Security Failures; 3. The Current Privacy and Data Security Legal Landscape; 4. Commercial Law's Consent Problem; 5. Products Liability in the IoT Age; 6. Digital Domination in Consumer Lending Transactions; 7. Consumer Data in Corporate Transactions; 8. Establishing Baseline Privacy and Security Frameworks; 9 Towards a Robust Commercial Law of Privacy and Security.
About the author
Stacy-Ann Elvy is a Professor of Law and Martin Luther King, Jr. Hall Research Scholar at the University of California, Davis School of Law. She is an expert on commercial law and its relationship to emerging technology, and she teaches courses on commercial law, privacy law and information security law. Her scholarship has been published in leading legal journals and books, including the Columbia Law Review, Boston College Law Review, Washington & Lee Law Review, Research Handbook on the Law of Artificial Intelligence, and the University of Michigan Journal of Gender and Law. In 2019, Professor Elvy received both the Otto L. Walter Distinguished Writing Award and the UC Davis CAMPSSAH Faculty Scholar Award. She is also an adviser to the American Law Institute's Principles for a Data Economy project and received the Rising Legal Star Award from the New York Law Journal in 2016.
Summary
This examination of the legal and consumer implications of the Internet of Things is for academics, lawyers, consumers, technology companies, privacy and security experts, and policy and government professionals. Elvy offers concrete solutions to usher in a more robust commercial law of privacy and security that protects consumer interests.