Regulation (EU) 2016/679, better known as GDPR, is an essential step to strengthen the fundamental rights of individuals in the era of innovation, simplifying the rules for businesses and increasing the safeguards for citizens in the digital single market. In the field of personal data protection, it should be recognized that the European Union system remains one of the most advanced in defining a regulatory context for the protection of privacy and in balancing the rights recognized to the individual with those deriving from the pursuit of interests. of a general nature. But despite this, especially on the web, user data does not seem to find adequate protection, exposed to the mercy of the Net, a place without rules.
This body of legislation, in fact, just over three years after its entry into force, shows the first intolerance in the face of the technological challenges of recent years: artificial intelligence, algorithms, bioprivacy, facial recognition systems, fake news and highly pervasive technologies such as those of deepfake And deepnude. This new scenario, which is rapidly evolving, already seems to make the rules protecting data protection that have only been in force for a few years appear obsolete.
The text (HERE A PREVIEW), prefacted by the Commissioner of the Authority for Guarantees in Communications, Antonello Giacomelli, analyzes the essential characteristics of the Privacy Regulation, reviewing the main institutions, the protagonists and the legal instruments of data governance, to then focus on the critical issues and the (poor) regulation of data drive economy, trying to provide some food for thought on the issues still unresolved and to be resolved urgently in order to generate that climate of trust necessary for the development of the much-invoked digital humanism.
The volume contains a large collection of jurisprudential cases on the main European cases concerning the protection of personal information, along with several case study deduced from everyday life (one for all the multiple implications in terms of privacy in the management of the health emergency linked to Covid-19), which make us understand the difficult reconciliation and the fleeting boundaries of a right yet to be written.
The book is currently available for purchase online at https://www.tabedizioni.it/shop/product/diritto-della-privacy-e-protezione-dei-dati-personali-562?category=5&order=name+asc&order=ordering+desc and soon in the main bookstores.
Similarly to what happened on the occasion of the publication of the previous text “FakeDemocracy“, The authors will donate the entire proceeds from sales to those organizations that protect the victims of cyberbullying, identity theft, catfishing and who, on a daily basis, counteract, with their action, the sad phenomenon of online disinformation, of which the fake news I’m at the base. This support is necessary, in the opinion of the two authors, to support and create a culture in the conscious and responsible use of digital technology among the very young, but also for parents and families in general, adults who have found themselves catapulted, within a few years, in a completely changed society and with many unexpected risks, such as telematic fraud.
The authors:
Alessandro Alongi is a teacher of Search Engine Optimization within the Degree Course in Communication and Multimedia of the Mercatorum University. Graduated in Law and Political Science, he specializes in Institutional Relations and Parliamentary Law and currently deals with legal and regulatory issues at an important telecommunications company, as well as carrying out research activities in the field of innovation law, of which he is the author of several studies and insights. Journalist, he collaborates with the newspapers “LabParlamento” and “La Discussione” for which he writes articles on innovation, privacy and digital society.
Fabio Pompei is a computer engineer, Ph.D. in Electronic Engineering and a journalist. He started his career in the banking sector and is currently a manager in a telecommunications company. Lecturer in degree courses (engineering) in public and private universities, he is the author of scientific publications in the telecommunications sector. In recent years he has held public positions, dealing in particular with economic and financial policies, technological innovation and administrative simplification.
Both are authors of “Digital conversion. Life in the time of web technology” (Ed. Alpes, 2016), “The value of data in the digital ecosystem“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2019) and”Fakedemocracy. The far west of information, between deepfake and fake news“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2020).
Regulation (EU) 2016/679, better known as GDPR, is an essential step to strengthen the fundamental rights of individuals in the era of innovation, simplifying the rules for businesses and increasing the safeguards for citizens in the digital single market. In the field of personal data protection, it should be recognized that the European Union system remains one of the most advanced in defining a regulatory context for the protection of privacy and in balancing the rights recognized to the individual with those deriving from the pursuit of interests. of a general nature. But despite this, especially on the web, user data does not seem to find adequate protection, exposed to the mercy of the Net, a place without rules.
This body of legislation, in fact, just over three years after its entry into force, shows the first intolerance in the face of the technological challenges of recent years: artificial intelligence, algorithms, bioprivacy, facial recognition systems, fake news and highly pervasive technologies such as those of deepfake And deepnude. This new scenario, which is rapidly evolving, already seems to make the rules protecting data protection that have only been in force for a few years appear obsolete.
The text (HERE A PREVIEW), prefacted by the Commissioner of the Authority for Guarantees in Communications, Antonello Giacomelli, analyzes the essential characteristics of the Privacy Regulation, reviewing the main institutions, the protagonists and the legal instruments of data governance, to then focus on the critical issues and the (poor) regulation of data drive economy, trying to provide some food for thought on the issues still unresolved and to be resolved urgently in order to generate that climate of trust necessary for the development of the much-invoked digital humanism.
The volume contains a large collection of jurisprudential cases on the main European cases concerning the protection of personal information, along with several case study deduced from everyday life (one for all the multiple implications in terms of privacy in the management of the health emergency linked to Covid-19), which make us understand the difficult reconciliation and the fleeting boundaries of a right yet to be written.
The book is currently available for purchase online at https://www.tabedizioni.it/shop/product/diritto-della-privacy-e-protezione-dei-dati-personali-562?category=5&order=name+asc&order=ordering+desc and soon in the main bookstores.
Similarly to what happened on the occasion of the publication of the previous text “FakeDemocracy“, The authors will donate the entire proceeds from sales to those organizations that protect the victims of cyberbullying, identity theft, catfishing and who, on a daily basis, counteract, with their action, the sad phenomenon of online disinformation, of which the fake news I’m at the base. This support is necessary, in the opinion of the two authors, to support and create a culture in the conscious and responsible use of digital technology among the very young, but also for parents and families in general, adults who have found themselves catapulted, within a few years, in a completely changed society and with many unexpected risks, such as telematic fraud.
The authors:
Alessandro Alongi is a teacher of Search Engine Optimization within the Degree Course in Communication and Multimedia of the Mercatorum University. Graduated in Law and Political Science, he specializes in Institutional Relations and Parliamentary Law and currently deals with legal and regulatory issues at an important telecommunications company, as well as carrying out research activities in the field of innovation law, of which he is the author of several studies and insights. Journalist, he collaborates with the newspapers “LabParlamento” and “La Discussione” for which he writes articles on innovation, privacy and digital society.
Fabio Pompei is a computer engineer, Ph.D. in Electronic Engineering and a journalist. He started his career in the banking sector and is currently a manager in a telecommunications company. Lecturer in degree courses (engineering) in public and private universities, he is the author of scientific publications in the telecommunications sector. In recent years he has held public positions, dealing in particular with economic and financial policies, technological innovation and administrative simplification.
Both are authors of “Digital conversion. Life in the time of web technology” (Ed. Alpes, 2016), “The value of data in the digital ecosystem“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2019) and”Fakedemocracy. The far west of information, between deepfake and fake news“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2020).
Regulation (EU) 2016/679, better known as GDPR, is an essential step to strengthen the fundamental rights of individuals in the era of innovation, simplifying the rules for businesses and increasing the safeguards for citizens in the digital single market. In the field of personal data protection, it should be recognized that the European Union system remains one of the most advanced in defining a regulatory context for the protection of privacy and in balancing the rights recognized to the individual with those deriving from the pursuit of interests. of a general nature. But despite this, especially on the web, user data does not seem to find adequate protection, exposed to the mercy of the Net, a place without rules.
This body of legislation, in fact, just over three years after its entry into force, shows the first intolerance in the face of the technological challenges of recent years: artificial intelligence, algorithms, bioprivacy, facial recognition systems, fake news and highly pervasive technologies such as those of deepfake And deepnude. This new scenario, which is rapidly evolving, already seems to make the rules protecting data protection that have only been in force for a few years appear obsolete.
The text (HERE A PREVIEW), prefacted by the Commissioner of the Authority for Guarantees in Communications, Antonello Giacomelli, analyzes the essential characteristics of the Privacy Regulation, reviewing the main institutions, the protagonists and the legal instruments of data governance, to then focus on the critical issues and the (poor) regulation of data drive economy, trying to provide some food for thought on the issues still unresolved and to be resolved urgently in order to generate that climate of trust necessary for the development of the much-invoked digital humanism.
The volume contains a large collection of jurisprudential cases on the main European cases concerning the protection of personal information, along with several case study deduced from everyday life (one for all the multiple implications in terms of privacy in the management of the health emergency linked to Covid-19), which make us understand the difficult reconciliation and the fleeting boundaries of a right yet to be written.
The book is currently available for purchase online at https://www.tabedizioni.it/shop/product/diritto-della-privacy-e-protezione-dei-dati-personali-562?category=5&order=name+asc&order=ordering+desc and soon in the main bookstores.
Similarly to what happened on the occasion of the publication of the previous text “FakeDemocracy“, The authors will donate the entire proceeds from sales to those organizations that protect the victims of cyberbullying, identity theft, catfishing and who, on a daily basis, counteract, with their action, the sad phenomenon of online disinformation, of which the fake news I’m at the base. This support is necessary, in the opinion of the two authors, to support and create a culture in the conscious and responsible use of digital technology among the very young, but also for parents and families in general, adults who have found themselves catapulted, within a few years, in a completely changed society and with many unexpected risks, such as telematic fraud.
The authors:
Alessandro Alongi is a teacher of Search Engine Optimization within the Degree Course in Communication and Multimedia of the Mercatorum University. Graduated in Law and Political Science, he specializes in Institutional Relations and Parliamentary Law and currently deals with legal and regulatory issues at an important telecommunications company, as well as carrying out research activities in the field of innovation law, of which he is the author of several studies and insights. Journalist, he collaborates with the newspapers “LabParlamento” and “La Discussione” for which he writes articles on innovation, privacy and digital society.
Fabio Pompei is a computer engineer, Ph.D. in Electronic Engineering and a journalist. He started his career in the banking sector and is currently a manager in a telecommunications company. Lecturer in degree courses (engineering) in public and private universities, he is the author of scientific publications in the telecommunications sector. In recent years he has held public positions, dealing in particular with economic and financial policies, technological innovation and administrative simplification.
Both are authors of “Digital conversion. Life in the time of web technology” (Ed. Alpes, 2016), “The value of data in the digital ecosystem“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2019) and”Fakedemocracy. The far west of information, between deepfake and fake news“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2020).
Regulation (EU) 2016/679, better known as GDPR, is an essential step to strengthen the fundamental rights of individuals in the era of innovation, simplifying the rules for businesses and increasing the safeguards for citizens in the digital single market. In the field of personal data protection, it should be recognized that the European Union system remains one of the most advanced in defining a regulatory context for the protection of privacy and in balancing the rights recognized to the individual with those deriving from the pursuit of interests. of a general nature. But despite this, especially on the web, user data does not seem to find adequate protection, exposed to the mercy of the Net, a place without rules.
This body of legislation, in fact, just over three years after its entry into force, shows the first intolerance in the face of the technological challenges of recent years: artificial intelligence, algorithms, bioprivacy, facial recognition systems, fake news and highly pervasive technologies such as those of deepfake And deepnude. This new scenario, which is rapidly evolving, already seems to make the rules protecting data protection that have only been in force for a few years appear obsolete.
The text (HERE A PREVIEW), prefacted by the Commissioner of the Authority for Guarantees in Communications, Antonello Giacomelli, analyzes the essential characteristics of the Privacy Regulation, reviewing the main institutions, the protagonists and the legal instruments of data governance, to then focus on the critical issues and the (poor) regulation of data drive economy, trying to provide some food for thought on the issues still unresolved and to be resolved urgently in order to generate that climate of trust necessary for the development of the much-invoked digital humanism.
The volume contains a large collection of jurisprudential cases on the main European cases concerning the protection of personal information, along with several case study deduced from everyday life (one for all the multiple implications in terms of privacy in the management of the health emergency linked to Covid-19), which make us understand the difficult reconciliation and the fleeting boundaries of a right yet to be written.
The book is currently available for purchase online at https://www.tabedizioni.it/shop/product/diritto-della-privacy-e-protezione-dei-dati-personali-562?category=5&order=name+asc&order=ordering+desc and soon in the main bookstores.
Similarly to what happened on the occasion of the publication of the previous text “FakeDemocracy“, The authors will donate the entire proceeds from sales to those organizations that protect the victims of cyberbullying, identity theft, catfishing and who, on a daily basis, counteract, with their action, the sad phenomenon of online disinformation, of which the fake news I’m at the base. This support is necessary, in the opinion of the two authors, to support and create a culture in the conscious and responsible use of digital technology among the very young, but also for parents and families in general, adults who have found themselves catapulted, within a few years, in a completely changed society and with many unexpected risks, such as telematic fraud.
The authors:
Alessandro Alongi is a teacher of Search Engine Optimization within the Degree Course in Communication and Multimedia of the Mercatorum University. Graduated in Law and Political Science, he specializes in Institutional Relations and Parliamentary Law and currently deals with legal and regulatory issues at an important telecommunications company, as well as carrying out research activities in the field of innovation law, of which he is the author of several studies and insights. Journalist, he collaborates with the newspapers “LabParlamento” and “La Discussione” for which he writes articles on innovation, privacy and digital society.
Fabio Pompei is a computer engineer, Ph.D. in Electronic Engineering and a journalist. He started his career in the banking sector and is currently a manager in a telecommunications company. Lecturer in degree courses (engineering) in public and private universities, he is the author of scientific publications in the telecommunications sector. In recent years he has held public positions, dealing in particular with economic and financial policies, technological innovation and administrative simplification.
Both are authors of “Digital conversion. Life in the time of web technology” (Ed. Alpes, 2016), “The value of data in the digital ecosystem“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2019) and”Fakedemocracy. The far west of information, between deepfake and fake news“(Ed. Editoriale Novanta, 2020).