Internet of Things and the Law Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies

Internet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies is the most comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the legal issues in the Internet of Things (IoT). For decades, the decreasing importance of tangible wealth and power – and the increasing significance of the...

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Hlavní autor: Noto La Diega, Guido
Médium: E-kniha Kniha
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Oxford Routledge 2022
Taylor & Francis
Taylor & Francis Group
Vydání:1
Edice:Routledge Research in the Law of Emerging Technologies
Témata:
Law
M2M
NFC
NFC
M2M
ISBN:1032305797, 1138604798, 9781138604797, 9781032305790, 0429468377, 9780429887499, 9780429468377, 0429887507, 9780429887482, 0429887493, 0429887485, 9780429887505
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  • Cover -- Endorsements -- Half Title -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 IoT Law: Obstacles and Alternatives in the Regulation of a Non-Binary Sociotechnological Phenomenon -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The IoT Today: Related Concepts, Definitions, and Core Features -- 1.3 Two Reasons That It Is Difficult to Regulate -- 1.4 Some Regulatory and Policy Options for an Interconnected World -- 1.5 Overcoming Regulatory Binaries, Coregulation, and Supervisory Authority -- 1.6 Interim Conclusion -- 2 The Internet of Spying Sex Toys, Killer Petrol Stations, and Manipulative Toasters: A View of Private Ordering from the Contractual Quagmire -- 2.1 Scope of Chapter and Private Ordering -- 2.2 A Four-Pronged Methodology -- 2.3 Consumer Benefits -- 2.4 The Main Risks Encountered by Consumers of Things -- 2.5 Fantastic Legals and Where to Find Them: Understanding Private Ordering through Amazon Echo's Contractual Quagmire -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- 3 The Internet of Contracts: The Tension between Consumer Contract Laws and IoT Imbalance -- 3.1 Scope of the Chapter -- 3.2 The IoT Overcomes Yet Another Binary: Unfairness of Substance and Unfairness of Form in the Smart Home -- 3.3 Private Ordering 'by Bricking': Can IoT Traders Deprive Consumers of their Things' Smartness? -- 3.4 Precontractual Duties to Inform Under the CRD in a Hyperconnected, Interface-Free World -- 3.5 Interim Conclusion -- 4 The Internet of Vulnerabilities: Tackling Human and Product Vulnerabilities through Noncontractual Consumer Laws -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 What's in a Product? EU Product Liability Laws and the Challenge of a Defective IoT -- 4.3 Can We Trust the Internet of Personalised Things? -- 4.4 Interim Conclusion -- 5 The Internet of Loos, the General Data Protection Regulation, and Digital Dispossession under Surveillance Capitalism
  • 5.1 Introduction: The Erosion of Privacy and Data Protection in the Global Private-Public Surveillance Network -- 5.2 The GDPR: From Confidentiality to Data Control -- 5.3 Data Protection Issues in the IoT -- 5.4 Surveillance Capitalism and IoT Apparatus: From Prediction to Execution -- 5.5 Looking into Alexa's Black Box -- 5.6 Can the GDPR Counter IoT-Powered Digital Dispossession? -- 5.7 Interim Conclusion: Data Protection Law and the 'Smart' Proletariat -- 6 The Internet of Things (You Don't Own) under Bourgeois Law: An Integrated Tactic to Rebalance Intellectual Property -- 6.1 Introduction: Intellectual Property and Rentier Capitalism -- 6.2 An Overview of the IP Issues and Themes in the IoT -- 6.3 Death of Ownership: To Strengthen Property Rights and Empower IoT Users-Digital Peasants or to Counter Bourgeois Property? -- 6.4 Intra-IP Limitations: IP Exceptions or the Piecemeal Protection of Public Interest -- 6.5 IP Overlaps and the Erosion of IP Exceptions in the 'Smart' World -- 6.6 Extra-IP Limitations: Are Standard Essential Patents on Fair, Reasonable, and Nondiscriminatory Terms IoT-FRANDly? -- 6.7 Interim Conclusion -- Conclusion: When the Law Fails Us: The Commons for a Collectivised and Open IoT -- Index