Digital Revolution - New Challenges for Law
Data Protection, Artificial Intelligence, Smart Products, Blockchain Technology and Virtual Currencies
Zusammenfassung
Digital Revolution – New Challenges for Law addresses the impact of digital technology on European Laws, taking inspiration from the work of the European Law Institute’s Digital Law Special Interest Group.
Contributions address such diverse issues as the notion of data, data protection, supply of digital content, digital inheritance, online platforms, artificial intelligence, algorithmic regulation, Internet of Things, 3D-Printing, blockchain technology, smart contracts and virtual currencies.
The analysis of these issues is not confined to one area such as contract law, but cuts across both legal subjects and other disciplines to highlight the breadth and depth of the challenges posed by digitalisation. In particular, this volume highlights the consequence of digitalisation by analysing new overlaps and relationships between different fields of law (e.g. the relationship between contract law and data protection, or private and criminal responsibility in the Internet of Things). Written by leading scholars, practitioners and policymakers, this volume provides answers to the challenges posed by the digital revolution and acts as a basis for further developments of EU law and beyond.
Dr Alberto De Franceschi is associate professor of Private Law at the University of Ferrara (Italy). Dr Reiner Schulze is a professor and Director of the Centre of European Private Law at the Westfa?lische Wilhelms-Universita?t Mu?nster (Germany).
Abstract
Digital Revolution – New Challenges for Law addresses the impact of digital technology on European Laws, taking inspiration from the work of the European Law Institute’s Digital Law Special Interest Group.
Contributions address such diverse issues as the notion of data, data protection, supply of digital content, digital inheritance, online platforms, artificial intelligence, algorithmic regulation, Internet of Things, 3D-Printing, blockchain technology, smart contracts and virtual currencies.
The analysis of these issues is not confined to one area such as contract law, but cuts across both legal subjects and other disciplines to highlight the breadth and depth of the challenges posed by digitalisation. In particular, this volume highlights the consequence of digitalisation by analysing new overlaps and relationships between different fields of law (e.g. the relationship between contract law and data protection, or private and criminal responsibility in the Internet of Things). Written by leading scholars, practitioners and policymakers, this volume provides answers to the challenges posed by the digital revolution and acts as a basis for further developments of EU law and beyond.
Dr Alberto De Franceschi is associate professor of Private Law at the University of Ferrara (Italy). Dr Reiner Schulze is a professor and Director of the Centre of European Private Law at the Westfa?lische Wilhelms-Universita?t Mu?nster (Germany).
- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- I–XVIII Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis I–XVIII
- 1–18 Part 1. New Challenges and Perspectives 1–18
- 1–15 A. Digital Revolution – New Challenges for Law: Introduction (De Franceschi/Schulze) 1–15
- I. The starting points
- II. Trade in data and data rights
- 1. “Free flow of data” and individual data rights
- 2. Consumer protection
- III. The rise of the Platform economy: Disruption and Regulatory challenges
- IV. Artificial intelligence: Opportunities and Risks
- 1. Technological innovation and self-regulation
- 2. Artificial Intelligence and the “personalisation” of Legal Norms
- 3. Liability for Artificial Intelligence
- a) New risks
- b) Product liability
- c) Operator’s liability
- V. Between conceptual disruption and coherency
- 1. Conceptual disruption
- 2. New interferences
- 3. Approaching coherency
- 16–18 B. Personal autonomy and the digital revolution (Graziadei) 16–18
- 19–74 Part 2. Digital Economy and the Disruption of Traditional Concepts 19–74
- 19–41 C. Legal Challenges of the Changing Role of Personal and Non-Personal Data in the Data Economy (Drexl) 19–41
- I. Introduction
- II. Towards a new regulatory theory for the digital economy
- 1. The basic concept
- 2. The four objectives and their interactions
- a) Guaranteeing functioning and competitive markets
- b) Enhancing innovation
- c) Consumer protection, and data protection in particular
- d) Public interest grounds, including freedom of information and free flow of information
- III. Why data subjects should not ‘own’ their personal data
- 1. Existing proposals in favour of a data ownership right in personal data
- 2. The fundamental rights dimension
- 3. Data ownership in personal data in conflict with data protection rules
- IV. Provision of personal data as a contractual counter-performance
- V. Data portability and access rights for non-personal data
- VI. Conclusion
- 42–56 D. The ALI-ELI Principles for a Data Economy (Wendehorst) 42–56
- I. About the Project
- 1. History
- 2. Overall objectives
- 3. Addressees
- II. Legal challenges posed by data-driven economies
- 1. Data-driven economies
- 2. Legal challenges
- a) Absence of fit of traditional legal concepts and categories
- b) Data protection and fundamental rights
- c) Overlap with consumer law
- III. Preliminary Draft No. 2
- 1. Purpose, scope, and definitions
- 2. Data transactions
- a) Contract typology
- b) Main types of transactions identified by Preliminary Draft No. 2
- c) The next steps to be taken
- 3. Restrictions on Free Control and Processing
- a) Wrongfulness of control or processing
- b) Data ownership
- c) Contractual protection
- d) Aggregated and derived data
- 4. Rights with regard to co-generated data
- a) Specific data rights vis-à-vis a controller
- b) The concept of co-generated data
- c) Access to and porting of co-generated data
- d) Desistance from control or processing of co-generated data
- e) Correction of co-generated data
- 5. Chapters VI to VIII
- IV. Conclusions
- 57–74 E. Towards Fairness and Transparency in the Platform Economy? A First Look at the P2B Regulation (Busch) 57–74
- I. Introduction
- II. The Platform Economy and its Discontents
- 1. The Rise of the Platform Economy
- 2. Beyond Antitrust: Fairness and Transparency
- III. The P2B Regulation: A First Assessment
- 1. Scope
- 2. Terms and Conditions
- a) A Fairness Test for P2B Contracts
- b) General Transparency Requirements
- c) Specific Contractual Terms
- 3. Change of Terms and Conditions
- 4. Restriction, Suspension and Termination
- a) Transparency Requirements
- b) Procedural Requirements
- 5. Transparency of Rankings
- 6. Dual Role of Platform Operators
- a) Marketplaces as Learning Tools
- b) Differentiated Treatment
- c) Ancillary Goods and Services
- 7. Data Access
- a) Transparency vs. Access Rights
- b) Portability of Reputation Data
- 8. Parity Clauses
- 9. Complaint-handling and Mediation
- 10. Collective Enforcement
- IV. Summary and Outlook
- 75–98 Part 3. The Processing of Personal Data 75–98
- 75–83 F. Consent for the Processing of Personal Data and its Relationship to Contract (Schmidt-Kessel) 75–83
- I. Consent in the GDPR
- 1. General prerequisites
- 2. Restrictions to consent
- 3. The so-called bundling prohibition
- II. Consent and Contract
- 1. Separation of contract and consent (Trennungsprinzip)
- 2. Consequence: consent capable of being object of an obligation
- III. Consent and (quasi) proprietary Positions
- 1. Close to an absolute right
- 2. Consent fulfils (some) functions of a disposition (Verfügung)
- IV. Consent and Transfer by Contract
- 1. General approaches to contract and transfer of property rights
- 2. Contract and consent – abstraction principle
- 3. Change by the Directive 770/2019 on the supply of digital content
- V. Conclusions
- 84–87 G. The Data Protection Officer (“DPO”) (Fauvarque-Cosson) 84–87
- 88–88 H. Digital Inheritance (Resta) 88–88
- 88–98 I. Digital inheritance as a legal issue 88–98
- II. The data protection perspective
- III. The succession law framework
- IV. Governance by contract
- 99–168 Part 4. Big Data, Artificial Intelligence and the Liability for Processing Personal Data 99–168
- 99–115 J. Individual Human Autonomy: The Rule of Law v. the Rules of Smart Technologies and their Inherent Manipulations (Graf von Westphalen) 99–115
- I. Some Reflections from the Inside
- 1. The Experts
- a) Jaron Lanier
- b) Yvonne Hofstetter
- 2. The Professional Gate Keepers
- 3. The Philosophers
- a) Richard David Precht
- b) Yuval Noah Harari
- 4. New Ways of Thinking and Its Consequences
- a) Andreas Rödder
- b) Daniel Suarez et al
- 5. Short Interim Summary
- II. The Regime of Algorithms v. the Rule of Law
- 1. The Basic Difference Between Legal Rules and Algorithms as Technical Norms
- a) Legal Rules
- b) Algorithms
- c) Preliminary Conclusions
- 2. The Special Extra-Territorial Aspect of BIG DATA
- 3. Formal Consent – No Sufficient Protection for the Consumer
- 3. Preliminary Summary
- IV. Possible Ways Out – But Scepticism Prevails
- 1. Digital Charta on European Human Rights
- 2. Further Protection Shields
- V. Summary
- 116–139 K. Information “Truth” and Digital Solidarity (Sica/Giannone Codiglione) 116–139
- I. Internet, Computer Freedom and Digital Solidarity
- II. Social Media: Virtual Communities or Social Engineering Systems
- III. The Information Market and Incentive Effects: The Case of Hate Speech
- IV. The External Factor: Web Disinformation and the News Revolution on Social Media
- V. Judicial Remedies and the Limits of the Law
- VI. The Problem of the Legal Definition and the Role of Internet Providers: From Neutrality to Accountability
- VII. The EU Strategy to Tackle Illegal Content Online an the new German Law on the Enforcement of Rights in Social Media
- VIII. Truth and Digital Solidarity in the Future of Internet Law: What Remedies, what Values, what Guarantor? Starting Points for a Holistic Approach
- 140–151 L. Certification mechanisms and liability rules under the GDPR. When the harmonisation becomes unification (Riccio/Pezza) 140–151
- I. Introduction
- II. Certification mechanism. An overview
- III. Article 82 GDPR: liability rules for data processing. Key differences with Directive 95/46
- IV. Potential issues. The notion of EU tort law: does it even exist
- 1. The nature of liability: identifying the relevant criteria
- 2. The notion of recoverable damages
- V. When it comes to practice. A country by country analysis
- 1. Reference to national legislation. The Italian and the German models
- 2. The court based approach – UK Data Protection Act
- 3. The importance of the national context. The French approach
- VI. Shaping a solution. The role of certifications
- VII. Conclusions and final remarks
- 152–168 M. The Right to Compensation for Breach of Data Protection Provisions in the EU Context (Riente) 152–168
- I. Introduction
- II. The EU General Context
- 1. Scope of application of Article 82 GDPR
- 2. The liability regime under Article 82 GDPR
- a) The controller
- b) The controller liability exemption
- c) The processor
- d) The processor liability exemption
- III. The Italian Scenario
- 1. The liability regime under the Italian Data Protection Code prior to the implementation of GDPR into national law
- a) Burden of proof under Article 15 of the Italian Data Protection Code
- b) The quantification of non-material damages
- 2. The liability regime under the Italian Data Protection Code after the implementation of GDPR into national law
- a) Burden of proof under the contractual liability regime
- b) Burden of proof under the non-contractual liability regime
- IV. Conclusion
- 169–244 Part 5. Liability for Digital Products 169–244
- 169–189 N. Risk Allocation and Liability Regimes in the IoT (Mezzanotte) 169–189
- I. Introduction
- II. The Field of Analysis: IoT and Connected Risks of Harm
- III. The Regulatory Context and the Available Liability Regimes
- 1. The Inadequacy of General Liability Remedies
- 2. Liability in the IoT Landscape: Product Liability as a Viable Source of Inspiration
- IV. Product Liability and Relevant Risks of Harm in the IoT
- 1. Liable Persons
- 2. The Notion of Product
- 3. The Notion of Defectiveness
- 4. The Scope of Recoverable Losses
- 5. Data Breach: the GDPR Liability Regime
- V. Proof of Causation in the IoT Multi-layered Environment
- VI. Conclusions
- 190–213 O. Autonomous Vehicles’ Liability: Need for Change? (Patti) 190–213
- I. Introduction
- II. A Fitness Check on EU and National Law Governing Liability
- III. The Current Legal Framework
- 1. Substantive Liability Rules
- 2. Compulsory Insurance
- 3. Product Liability
- IV. What Stays and What Fades Away
- 1. From the Keeper to the Manufacturer
- 2. The Near Future: A Virtuous Competition between New and Old
- 3. A More Distant Future: Only Autonomous Vehicles on the Roads
- V. The Slow Metamorphosis of the Product Liability Regime
- 1. An Ancient Piece of Legislation
- 2. Some Issues to be Resolved
- a) Eliminating the Development Risk Defence
- b) Discovering a Defect in the Design
- c) A Duty to ‘observe’ the Product
- d) The dilemma situations
- e) The Proof of Causation
- 3. A Different Product Liability or a New Paradigm of Traffic Liability
- 4. Conclusion
- 214–244 P. Protecting the Values of Consumer Law in the Digital Economy: The case of 3D-printing (Howells/Twigg-Flesner/Willett) 214–244
- I. Introduction
- 1. Core Questions and Answers
- 2. Jurisdictional focus and significance
- 3. Structure
- 4. Digital disruption and 3D-printing
- 5. Key questions
- 6. Filling key research gaps-a new way of responding to innovation
- II. Consumer Law Values and Digital Innovation
- 1. The need ethic
- 2. Innovation and the continuing importance of the need ethic
- III. 3D Printing and the Law
- 1. 3D printing used in commercial production of goods
- 2. Liability of professionals converting a CAD-file into a finished product
- 3. Liability for CAD file
- 4. The boundary between “hobbyists” and “professionals”
- 5. Radical deviation from doctrinal tradition: Network Liability
- IV. Concluding Comments: consumer law values, 3D-printing and the wider digital revolution
- 245–298 Part 6. The Approach of the European Commission on Artificial Intelligence 245–298
- Q. A system of governance for Artificial Intelligence through the lens of emerging intersections between AI and EU law (Mazzini)
- I. Introduction
- II. Product safety
- 1. The risk of tension between EU product safety law and AI
- a) AI safety
- b) The inherent relationship between safety and risk
- III. Product liability
- 1. The concept of defect
- 2. Burden of proof
- 3. Later defect defense
- IV. Consumer protection
- 1. Average consumer
- 2. Information duties
- 3. Contractual fairness
- V. Protection of personal data
- 1. Automated individual decision making, including profiling
- a) The applicability of GDPR to uses and applications of AI generating insights, inferences and predictions
- aa) The meaning of “identification” in GDPR
- bb) The legal status of the knowledge generated by AI systems
- b) Decisions based solely on automated processing
- c) Decisions that produce legal effects or similarly significantly affect the data subject
- d) Necessity of processing for the purposes of entering into, or performance of, a contract
- e) Explicit consent
- f) Right of explanation
- VI. Conclusions
- 299–340 Part 7. Blockchain Technology, Smart Contracts and Virtual Currencies 299–340
- 299–312 R. Smart Contracts: Do we need New Legal Rules? (Weber) 299–312
- I. Introduction
- 1. Blockchain Technology as New Infrastructure
- 2. Suitability of Blockchain for Execution of Transactions
- II. Notion and Characteristics of Smart Contracts
- 1. Notion
- 2. Characteristics
- 3. Practical Examples
- III. Contract Formation
- 1. Challenges of Automated Contracting
- 2. Specific Problem of General Business Conditions
- 3. Challenges for the Viability of Legal Contracts
- 4. Need for New Legal Rules in Contract Formation
- IV. Performance of Smart Contracts
- 1. Application of Traditional Rules
- 2. Potential Performance Failures
- a) Technological Failures
- b) Program Failures
- 3. Digital Execution and Enforcement
- a) Transfer Challenges
- b) Enforcement: Dispute Resolution
- 4. Need for New Legal Rules in Contract Performance
- V. Outlook
- 313–326 S. Legal Boundaries of Blockchain Technologies: Smart Contracts as Self-Help? (Möslein) 313–326
- I. The Emergence of Technology-Based Rules
- 1. Smart Contracts as Regulatory Devices
- 2. Blockchain Technology as a Regulatory Infrastructure
- 3. Conflicts of Legal and Technology-Based Rules
- II. The Double Duality of Legal Boundaries
- 1. Recognition and Restrictions
- a) The State Monopoly on the Legitimate Use of Force
- b) Technological vs. Legal Enforceability
- c) Substantive Scrutiny
- 2. Legal and Judicial Boundaries
- a) Legislative Provisions
- b) Judicial Case Law
- c) The Example of Starter Interrupt Devices
- III. The Variety of Legal Boundaries
- 1. Boundaries in European Contract Law
- a) Unfair Terms Directive
- b) Directive on Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content
- 3. Boundaries in National Law: Rules on Self-Help
- a) Self-Execution as Self-Help
- b) Legitimacy of Self-help
- c) Smart Contracts as Legitimate Self-Help
- IV. Conclusion
- 327–340 T. The Payment with Bitcoins and other Virtual Currencies – Risks, liabilities and regulatory responses (Barrière) 327–340
- I. Introduction
- 1. Blockchain
- 2. Money
- 3. Virtual currencies
- 4. Actors
- 5. Bitcoins
- 6. Benefits/Risks of Virtual Currencies
- 7. Law Enforcement
- 8. Variety of Characterization of Virtual Currencies
- 9. Regulatory Responses
- II. Financial Integrity Rules
- 1. Risks Scenarios
- 2. Gatekeepers
- 3. Anti-Money Laundering/Terrorist Financing Rules
- a) Anonymity
- b) Money Transmission Services
- c) Exchange Controls and Capital Flow Management
- III. Consumer Protection
- 1. Disruption of Technology
- 2. Un-Regulated Entites
- 3. Frauds
- 4. Support of Risk
- 5. Offshore issues
- 6. Absence of Legal Tender
- 7. Price Risk
- 8. Virtual Currencies Exchanges
- 9. Concurrent Regulatory Jurisdiction
- 10. Taxation
- 11. Consumer Rules
- IV. Financial and Monetary Stability
- 1. Systemic Risks
- 2. Monetary Policy
- V. Conclusion
- 1. Substance over form
- 2. Limiting the anonymity of users
- 3. International Standards
- 341–344 Part 8. Concluding Remarks 341–344
- U. Digital Revolution – New Challenges for Law: Final remarks (van Erp)