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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Peter P. Swire , Robert E. LitanPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Brookings Institution Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.227kg ISBN: 9780815782391ISBN 10: 081578239 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 01 October 1998 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. The Legal Context of the Privacy Directive 3. Data Protection and Information Technologies 4. Effects of Data Protection Laws on Electronic Commerce 5. Privacy Issues Affecting Many Organizations 6. The Financial Services Sector 7. Other Sectors with Large Transborder Activities 8. Policy Recommendations for Privacy Issues 9. The Internet, Electronic Commerce, and World Data Flows Appendix A: European Union Directive on Data Protection Appendix B: Summary of Potential Effects of the EU Directive IndexReviewsUnder the new European Union Data Protection Directive, thousands of American companies doing business in Europe will break the law if they send personally identi-fied data on their European customers or employees back to the U.S. for regular processing and administration. This is one of the disturbing developments analyzed lucidly by Swire and Litan in a book that illuminates the dilemmas of writing privacy protection rules that are applied across different legal and political cultures, and that attempt to regulate information technology settings that are mutating almost in lightspeed. Their book is an absolute necessity for businesses operating in the global arena, for the lawyers advising such companies, and for government officials in all countries who want to develop a global data protection system that serves both privacy and consumer choice in the 21st century. --Alan Westin, Columbia University This book, by two of America's leading experts in the law of data privacy, confronts the looming threat of Europe's data privacy regime. By assessing a wide range of fac-tors, both legal and nonlegal, that contribute to the protection of privacy in the United States, the book gives a clear and balanced picture of the gaps in America's protec-tions for privacy that remain. The completeness of this careful account, tied with the specific policy proposals offered at the end, make this an extraordinary contribution to solving one of the most significant conflicts raised by the Internet and the free exchange of information its present architecture presumes. --Lawrence Lessig, Harvard Law School None of Your Business is the most comprehensive treatment of the effect of the European Privacy Directive on data flows in the United States yet written. The book shows the Directive's implications for information transfers to the United States and the ability to use data in this country to be potentially extraordinary. The authors make a powerful case for the need for the development of data policy and practice in this country and make a number of extremely useful suggestions as to how that might be engineered. --Arthur R. Miller, Harvard Law School None of Your Business is the most comprehensive treatment of the effect of the European Privacy Directive on data flows in the United States yet written. The book shows the Directive's implications for information transfers to the United States and the ability to use data in this country to be potentially extraordinary. The authors make a powerful case for the need for the development of data policy and practice in this country and make a number of extremely useful suggestions as to how that might be engineered. --Arthur R. Miller, Harvard Law School This book, by two of America's leading experts in the law of data privacy, confronts the looming threat of Europe's data privacy regime. By assessing a wide range of fac-tors, both legal and nonlegal, that contribute to the protection of privacy in the United States, the book gives a clear and balanced picture of the gaps in America's protec-tions for privacy that remain. The completeness of this careful account, tied with the specific policy proposals offered at the end, make this an extraordinary contribution to solving one of the most significant conflicts raised by the Internet and the free exchange of information its present architecture presumes. --Lawrence Lessig, Harvard Law School Under the new European Union Data Protection Directive, thousands of American companies doing business in Europe will break the law if they send personally identi-fied data on their European customers or employees back to the U.S. for regular processing and administration. This is one of the disturbing developments analyzed lucidly by Swire and Litan in a book that illuminates the dilemmas of writing privacy protection rules that are applied across different legal and political cultures, and that attempt to regulate information technology settings that are mutating almost in lightspeed. Their book is an absolute necessity for businesses operating in the global arena, for the lawyers advising such companies, and for government officials in all countries who want to develop a global data protection system that serves both privacy and consumer choice in the 21st century. --Alan Westin, Columbia University Author InformationPeter P. Swire is professor of law at the Ohio State University College of Law. He is editor of the Cyberspace Law Abstracts and has written on cryptography, cyberbanking, and the legal regulation of the Internet.Robert E. Litan is director of the Economic Studies program and holder of the Cabot Family Chair at the Brookings Institution. His previous books include Going Digital! (Brookings/Cato, 1998) and Globaphobia: Confronting Fears about Open Trade (Brookings/Progressive Policy Institute/Twentieth Century Fund, 1998). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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