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This book interrogates the legality of corporate surveillance, offering a corrective approach to protecting privacy through litigation--not through legislation. It will be of interest to researchers and practitioners in the field of corporate surveillance, digital law, and privacy law.
Table des matières
Introduction
Part I: Foundations of Commercial Surveillance Litigation1. Privacy as Power Relation
2. The Snowden Revelations and Government Cybersurveillance
3. Cambridge Analytica and the Unmasking of the Corporate Panopticon
Part II: The Current Privacy Battlefield4. Geolocation Tracking - An Exhaustive Chronicle of our Daily Lives
5. Biometric Information Collection - Through a Face Scanner Darkly
6. Internet Activity Tracking - Business as Usual or Egregious Violation of Social Norms?
7. Big Data, Data Brokers, and the Corporate Surveillance Cartel
8. Harm and Damages Theories
Part III: Critiques, Alternative Fronts, and Future9. Privacy, Performance, and Power
10. International Privacy: The Fight for Digital Sovereignty
11. The Rise of Hipster Antitrust - A New Front in the Fight for Privacy
12. The Future of Privacy Law
A propos de l'auteur
David Rudolph is Adjunct Professor of Law at University of California College of the Law, San Francisco, where he teaches privacy law, and a partner at Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, where he is a member of the firm's Cybersecurity and Data Privacy and Antitrust and Intellectual Property practice groups. He has extensive experience litigating privacy class actions. He is a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/US), and regularly presents and lectures on current issues in privacy law. He received his B.A. in philosophy and J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.