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Book Cover: General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
Editions:Hardcover - First edition
ISBN: 978-3-8487-3372-9
Pages: 1,241
ePub - First edition
ISBN: 978-3-8452-7698-4

Editors: Indra Spiecker gen. Döhmann, Vagelis Papakonstantinou, Gerrit Hornung, Paul De Hert

 

The General Data Protection Regulation
has established a uniform European data protection law. The Member States must directly apply European law standards and question their own interpretation criteria.
The new major commentary on the GDPR
is written by leading European lawyers who have extensively analysed the European and transnational academic discourse. The commentaries take into account the existing approaches to interpretation at national level, place them in a European legal environment and thus impress with new arguments that also offer new possibilities in contentious proceedings.

The advantages at a glance
• New European law argumentation patterns for national interpretation and application practice
• European law classification of the Member States' scope for action, especially the scope of application of the GDPR
• Focus on current topics:
• - International data transfer and data processing, also in cloud computing
• - Right to be forgotten
• - One-Stop-Shop
• - Sanctions and supervisory measures
• - Profiling
• - Pseudonymisation and anonymisation
• - Consent and other authorisations for personal data processing by companies
• - Data protection audit and certification

With contributions by
Jan Philipp Albrecht | Marco Almada | Jens Ambrock | Sebastian Bretthauer | Laura Carmichael | Emma Cradock | Alexander Dix | Stefan Drewes | Jos Dumortier | Domingos Farinho | Pieter Gryffroy | Paul De Hert | Gerrit Hornung | András Jóri | Irene Kamara | Moritz Karg | Juliano Maranhão | Hans-W. Micklitz | Evangelia Papadaki | Vagelis Papakonstantinou | Cristina Pauner Chulvi | Artemi Rallo Lombarte | Judith Rauhofer | Philipp Richter | Alexander Roßnagel | Giovanni Sartor | Burkhard Schafer | Peter Schantz | Stephanie Schiedermair | Achim Seifert | Spiros Simitis | Eva Souhrada-Kirchmayer | Indra Spiecker genannt Döhmann | Sophie Stalla-Bourdillon | Olivia Tambou | Niko Tsakalakis | Jorge Viguri Cordero

Preview the Book and Find More Information: https://nomosverlag.info/GDPR-Preview

Act-ification, GDPR Mimesis and EU Law Brutality at Play

Vagelis Papakonstantinou, Paul De Hert
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Book Cover: The Regulation of Digital Technologies in the EU
Editions:Hardcover - First edition
ISBN: 9781032614441
Pages: 154
ePub - First edition
ISBN: 9781032630175

EU regulatory initiatives concerning technology-related topics have spiked over the past few years. On the basis of its Priorities Programme, which is focused on making Europe ‘Fit for the Digital Age’, the European Commission has been busily releasing new texts aimed at regulating a number of technology topics, including data uses, online platforms, cybersecurity, and artificial intelligence.

This book identifies three phenomena which are common to all EU digital technologies-relevant regulatory initiatives: act-ification, GDPR mimesis, and regulatory brutality. These three phenomena serve as indicators or early signs of a new European technology law-making paradigm that now seems ready to emerge. They divulge new-found confidence on the part of the EU digital technologies legislator, who has now asserted for itself the right to form policy options and create new rules in the field for all of Europe.

Bringing together an analysis of the regulatory initiatives for the management of technology topics in the EU for the first time, this book will be of interest to academics, policymakers, and practitioners, sparking academic and policymaking interest and discussion.

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Note. This page collects essays, posts, and talks related to The Regulation of Digital Technologies in the EU. After publication, the book is the authoritative statement; any earlier pieces that diverge should be read as superseded by the book.

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Last updated: October 2025.

A political philosophy based on information and its processing

This book outlines a new political philosophy that is based on information and its processing.

Aristotelians will appreciate the analysis; those siding with Plato (there are only two kinds of people, as Coleridge said), less so. In essence, it supports Aristotle’s argument by complementing his intuitively correct but unsupported and never fully elaborated claim that states are natural to humans. It corrects Plato and his epigones (practically every political philosopher ever since) by refuting their claim (considered a given today) that states are artificial, the product of agreement among humans.

It is based on only two basic, and straightforward, premises. Therefore, understanding it (but not necessarily appreciating it—for that one has to follow the order of things) can be achieved in anything from a few minutes (see only Chapters 7 and 19) to a few hours (add Chapters 8, 9 and 11), a few days (Chapter 7 onwards) or a few months and beyond (read also Chapters 1–6). Each chapter is independently written specifically for this purpose, and therefore, there is some repetition. Notes (only paragraphs marked with an asterisk are annotated, at the end of the book) are there to help explain—but they do add considerably to the times just promised.

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Note. This page collects essays, posts, and talks related to Archipelago as the project evolves. Once the book is published, it is the authoritative statement; earlier pieces that diverge should be read as superseded by the book.

Key essays (start here)

All other essays & chapters (full list)

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