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Case Law Privacy

Google takes right to be forgotten battle to France’s highest court | Technology | The Guardian

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Antitrust Case Law Data Privacy

Bundeskartellamt initiates proceeding against Facebook on suspicion of having abused its market power by infringing data protection rules

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Privacy

La CNIL met publiquement en demeure FACEBOOK de se conformer, dans un délai de trois mois, à la loi Informatique et Libertés – CNIL – Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés

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Antitrust Extra Internet Pick of the Week

The Internet of Things Will Be the World’s Biggest Robot – Schneier on Security

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Case Law Privacy

ECJ Sets a Crucial Week For Data Protection in Europe

  • “EU law precludes the transfer and processing of personal data between two public administrative bodies without the persons  concerned (data  subjects) having been informed in advance”.

  • “…the Commission was required to find that the United States  in  fact ensures, by reason of its domestic law or its international commitments, a level of protection of fundamental rights essentially equivalent to that guaranteed within the EU under the directive read in the light of the Charter. The Court observes that the Commission did not make such a finding,  but merely examined the safe harbour scheme [.]   National security, public interest and law enforcement requirements of the United States prevail over the safe harbour scheme, so that United States undertakings are bound to disregard, without limitation, the protective rules laid down by that scheme where they conflict with such requirements. The United States safe harbour scheme
    thus enables  interference, by United  States public  authorities,  with the fundamental rights of persons, and the Commission decision does not refer either to the existence, in the United States, of  rules  intended  to limit any such interference or to  the existence of effective legal protection against the interference…”.

  • “…Weltimmo, a company registered in Slovakia, runs a property dealing website concerning Hungarian properties. Within that context, it processes the personal data of the advertisers  [.]  the Court notes that the presence of only one representative can, in some circumstances, suffice to constitute an establishment if that representative acts with a sufficient degree of stability for the provision of the services concerned in the Member State in question [.]  The  Court states that each supervisory authority established by a Member State must ensure compliance, within the territory of that State, with the provisions adopted by all Member States pursuant to the directive. Consequently, each supervisory authority is to hear claims lodged by any person concerning the protection of his rights and freedoms in regard to the processing of personal data, even if the law applicable to that processing is the law of another Member State”

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Internet Privacy

Open Letter to Google From 80 Internet Scholars: Release RTBF Compliance Data — Medium

  • “What We Seek

    • Aggregate data about how Google is responding to the >250,000 requests to delist links thought to contravene data protection from name search results. We should know if the anecdotal evidence of Google’s process is representative: What sort of information typically gets delisted (e.g., personal health) and what sort typically does not (e.g., about a public figure), in what proportions and in what countries?”

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DRM Piracy Privacy Uncategorized

Future of Copyright: Adobe’s Digital Edition ebook software uses privacy-sensitive data to combat piracy

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Privacy

Google to Boost Android Encryption, Joining Apple

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Privacy

Meet the Online Tracking Device That is Virtually Impossible to Block – ProPublica

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Case Law Data Privacy

German court rules against Facebook’s “Friend Finder” – Lexology

  • “The Berlin Court of Appeal upheld a lower court ruling that Facebook’s “Friend Finder” function is unlawful. The Court agreed with the Berlin Regional Court’s 2012 decision that the Friend Finder function violates both German data protection law and unfair trade law, and re-affirmed the invalidity of several clauses in Facebook’s privacy notice and other online terms and conditions.”


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