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Computer law & security report

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    The elephant in the room: A global mechanism for E-Sport disputes

    Serkan KayaEda Sahin-SenguelAybueke Keskin
    106128.1-106128.12页
    查看更多>>摘要:The e-sports industry has seen exponential growth, leading to increased disputes among players, teams, and organisers. Traditional dispute resolution methods, such as litigation, often fall short due to their time-consuming nature, the lack of technical expertise of the parties, and the international scope of e-sports disputes. This article highlights the potential of Blockchain Dispute Resolution (BDR) mechanisms to address these challenges. BDR offers several advantages for e-sports dispute resolution, ensuring transparency by recording all transactions and decisions on a public ledger, which can be accessed by all parties involved. This reduces the risk of biased decisions and enhances trust among stakeholders. Additionally, smart contracts can automate the enforcement of agreements, reducing the need for intermediaries and speeding up the resolution process. The article also underscores the importance of developing standardised rules and protocols for blockchain-based dispute resolution in e-sports, as it provides a structured approach for the recognition and enforcement of decisions made through blockchain mechanisms. The article, therefore, argues that the integration of blockchain technology in e-sports not only offers potential solutions for dispute resolution but also opens new avenues for monetisation and fan engagement, exciting the industry and its fans with the possibilities it brings for a more interactive and engaging future.

    Mapping the empirical literature of the GDPR's (In-)effectiveness: A systematic review

    Wenlong LiZihao LiWenkai LiYueming Zhang...
    106129.1-106129.19页
    查看更多>>摘要:In the realm of data protection, a striking disconnect prevails between traditional domains of doctrinal, legal, theoretical, and policy-based inquiries and a burgeoning body of empirical evidence. Much of the scholarly and regulatory discourse remains entrenched in abstract legal principles or normative frameworks, leaving the empirical landscape uncharted or minimally engaged. Since the birth of EU data protection law, a modest body of empirical evidence has been generated but remains widely scattered and unexamined. Such evidence offers vital insights into the effectiveness of data protection measures but languishes on the periphery, inadequately integrated into the broader conversation. To make a meaningful connection, we conduct a comprehensive review and synthesis of empirical research spanning nearly three decades (1995 - March 2022), advocating for a more robust integration of empirical evidence into the evaluation and review of the GDPR while laying a methodological foundation for coordinated research. By categorising evidence into four distinct groups- Awareness and Trust, Operational Performance, Ripple Effect, and Normative Clarity, we provide a structured analysis therein and highlight the variety and nuances of the empirical evidence produced about the GDPR. Our discussion offers critical reflections on the current orientations and designs of evaluation work, challenging some popular but misguided orientations that significantly influence public debate and even direction of empirical and doctrinal research. This synthesis also sheds light on several understated aspects, surfaced by our systematic review, including the complex structure of the GDPR and the internal contradictions between components, the GDPR's interaction with other normative values and legal frameworks, as well as unintended consequences imposed by the GDPR on other values not explicitly recognised as regulatory objectives (such as innovation). We further propose a methodological improvement in how empirical evidence can be generated and utilised, stressing the need for more guided, coordinated and rigorous empirical research. By re-aligning empirical focus towards these ends and establishing strategic coordination at the community level, we seek to inform and underpin evaluative work that aligns empirical inquiries with policy and doctrinal needs, while truly reflecting the complexities and challenges of safeguarding personal data in the digital age.

    Scoring the European citizen in the AI era

    Nathan Genicot
    106130.1-106130.9页
    查看更多>>摘要:Social scoring is one of the AI practices banned by the AI Act. This ban is explicitly inspired by China, which in 2014 announced its intention to set up a large-scale government project - the Social Credit System - aiming to rate every Chinese citizen according to their good behaviour, using digital technologies and AI. But in Europe, individuals are also scored by public and private bodies in a variety of contexts, such as assessing creditwor-thiness, monitoring employee productivity, detecting social fraud or terrorist risks, and so on. However, the AI Act does not intend to prohibit these types of scoring, as they would qualify as "high-risk AI systems", which are authorised while subject to various requirements. One might therefore think that the ban on social scoring will have no practical effect on the scoring practices already in use in Europe, and that it is merely a vague safeguard in case an authoritarian power is tempted to set up such a system on European territory. Contrary to this view, this article argues that the ban has been drafted in a way that is flexible and therefore likely to make it a useful tool, similar and complementary to Article 22 of the General Data Protection Regulation, to protect individuals against certain forms of disproportionate use of AI-based scoring.

    Principles for the responsible application of Generative AI

    Roger Clarke
    106131.1-106131.16页
    查看更多>>摘要:The quest for Artificial Intelligence (AI) has comprised successive waves of excessive enthusiasm followed by long, dispirited lulls. Most recently, during the first 3-4 years of public access to Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI), many authors have bought into the bullish atmosphere, replaying consultancies' predictions about gold mines of process efficiency and innovation. A more balanced approach to the technology is needed. Instances of apparently positive results need calm analysis, firstly to distinguish mirages from genuine contributions; secondly, to identify ways to effectively exploit the new capabilities; and thirdly, to formulate guidance for the avoidance and mitigation of negative consequences. This article's first contribution is to ground the evaluation of GenAI's pathway, applications, impacts, implications and risks in a sufficiently deep appreciation of the technology's nature and key features. A wide range of sources is drawn on, in order to present descriptions of the processes involved in text-based GenAI. From those processes, 20 key characteristics are abstracted that together give rise to the promise and the threats GenAI embodies. The effects of GenAI derive not from the technological features alone, but also from the patterns within which it is put to use. By mapping usage patterns across to domains of application, the phenomenon's impacts and implications can be more reliably delineated. The analysis provides a platform whereby the article's final contribution can be made. Previously-formulated principles for the responsible application of AI of all kinds are applied in the particular context of GenAI.

    Public data authorized operation and the rise of data finance in China: origins, risks, and prospects

    Jingxian Chen
    106132.1-106132.15页
    查看更多>>摘要:This article explores the introduction of public data authorized operation (PDAO) in China and its role in the emergence of data finance, a new revenue model for local governments facing fiscal pressure due to declining land finance. It argues that the shift toward data finance is driven by the local government's need for alternative fiscal resources, enabled by policies promoting the conditional and paid use of public data. The article examines the risks associated with the revenue-oriented approach to PDAO, such as the erosion of free public data openness, the formation of administrative monopolies, increased costs for data utilization, and the fragmentation of data regulations across regions. The article offers insights into the future of data finance and PDAO in China. It suggests that data finance should not be driven solely by short-term revenue goals but rather should be considered a strategic tool aimed at enhancing the country's digital infrastructure and fostering long-term innovation. A comprehensive fiscal framework-including clear pricing standards, balanced revenue allocation mechanisms, and robust fiscal oversight-should be established to ensure that funds generated from PDAO are managed legally, transparently, and efficiently.

    A Solid use case to empower and protect data subjects: Responsibilities under GDPR for governance of personal data stores

    Michiel FierensHarshvardhan J. PanditAurelia Tamo-LarrieuxKimberly Garcia...
    106133.1-106133.16页
    查看更多>>摘要:Decentralised data governance has emerged as an alternative model in response to the challenges of managing data and privacy in conventional centralised models. 'Personal Data Stores' (PDS) are at the forefront of this movement and provide forms of control over storage and management of data to the individual with the goal of empowering them. In this article, we argue how PDS, while being important technological innovations, are challenging to implement in the current regulatory landscape as the interpretation of responsibilities under the GDPR is woefully inadequate for decentralised systems. This represents a challenge to the decentralisation movement and makes it difficult to empower and protect individuals under the GDPR (data subjects) using PDS. A thorough understanding of the technological and legal situation and therefore an interdisciplinary approach is essential to make policymakers aware of any efforts that still need to be made to realise the decentralisation paradigm's goal. We therefore build upon research investigating GDPR compliance in decentralised data storage and management but do so through an interdisciplinary lens applied to an emerging application, Solid, that provides technical specifications for implementing it as the leading PDS implementation. By taking an interdisciplinary approach, we consider the interaction between the legal definitions from the GDPR and the implications of established case law with Solid's technical specifications and its possible implementations. We conclude with recommendations regarding the division of responsibilities for policymakers, authorities, market participants and technical developers to simultaneously protect and empower those involved in the use of PDS, particularly through Solid. Furthermore, the role of decentralised systems such as Solid is discussed, as well as the current unclear regulatory landscape surrounding it in the context of implementing the Data Governance Act (DGA). The implications for further AI development and within data spaces are also considered.

    Artificial intelligence, human vulnerability and multi-level resilience

    Sue Anne Teo
    106134.1-106134.17页
    查看更多>>摘要:Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasing being deployed across various sectors in society. While bringing progress and promise to scientific discovery, public administration, healthcare, transportation and human well-being generally, artificial intelligence can also exacerbate existing forms of human vulnerabilities and can introduce new vulnerabilities through the interplay of AI inferences, predictions and content that is generated. This underpins the anxiety of policymakers in terms of managing potential harms and vulnerabilities and the harried landscape of governance and regulatory modalities, including through the European Union's effort to be the first in the world to comprehensively regulate AI. This article examines the adequacy of the existing theories of human vulnerability in countering the challenges posed by artificial intelligence, including through how vulnerability is theorised and addressed within human rights law and within existing legislative efforts such as the EU AI Act. Vulnerability is an element that informs the contours of groups and populations that are protected, for example under non-discrimination law and privacy law. A critical evaluation notes that while human vulnerability is taken into account in governing and regulating AI systems, the vulnerability lens that informs legal responses is one that is particularistic, static and identifiable. In other words, the law demands that vulnerabilities are known in advance in order for meaningful parameters of protection to be designed around them. The individual, as the subject of legal protection, is also expected to be able to identify the harms suffered and therein seek for accountability. However, AI can displace this straightforward framing and the legal certainty that implicitly underpins how vulnerabilities are dealt with under the law. Through data-driven inferential insights of predictive AI systems and content generation enabled by general purpose AI models, novel forms of dynamic, unforeseeable and emergent forms of vulnerability can arise that cannot be adequately encompassed within existing legal responses. Instead, it requires an expansion of not only the types of legal responses offered but also of vulnerability theory itself and the measures of resilience that should be taken to address the exacerbation of existing vulnerabilities and but also of emergent ones. The article offers a re-theorisation of human vulnerability in the age of AI as one informed by the universalist idea of vulnerability theorised by Martha Fineman. A new conceptual framework is offered, through an expanded understanding that sketches out the human condition in this age as one of 'algorithmic vulnerability.' It finds support for this new condition through a vector of convergence from the growing vocabularies of harm, the regulatory direction and drawing from scholarship on emerging vulnerabilities. The article proposes the framework of multi-level resilience to account for existing and emerging vulnerabilities. It offers a typology, examining how resilience towards vulnerabilities can be operationalised at the level of the individual, through technological design and within regulatory initiatives and other measures that promote societal resilience. The article also addresses objections to this new framing, namely in terms of how it seemingly results in a problem with no agency, potentially negating fault ascription and blame. Further, it addresses if the re-conception itself falls into the trap of technological determinism and finally, how the universalist notion of vulnerability can seemingly negate human autonomy that is a key feature of human dignity.

    Data portability strategies in the EU: Moving beyond individual rights

    Yongle ChaoMeihe XuAurelia Tamo-LarrieuxKonrad Kollnig...
    106135.1-106135.11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Data-driven innovation promises benefits for citizens, businesses, and organizations. To release the economic and social value of data, however, these actors need access to data. To get access to data, EU policymakers have introduced the concept of data portability. Data portability has traditionally been considered an individual right to enhance data subjects' control over their personal data under the GDPR. Today, however, the concept was further developed in the DA and DMA to complement and enhance the GDPR right to data portability. Yet, the DA and DMA have different regulatory objectives compared to the GDPR. We argue in this paper that the concept of data portability has evolved beyond its original scope of protecting individual rights, while in the midst of a paradigm shift towards better access and flow for multiple stakeholders. However, this paradigm shift has rarely been explored and is not achieved yet in practice, as the academic and practical understanding of data portability is still focused on an individual level. To fill this gap, we analyze the evolution of data portability as an important novel policy instrument in (newer) EU legislation, as well as reflect on the shortcomings of the current understanding and implementation approach by means of use cases. We make the argument to understand the concept of data portability as a foundation for unlocking the collective value of data. We contend that data interoperability is both a technical issue and a political concern, and argue that sectoral and modular data interoperability standards are an opportunity for facilitating the effective implementation of data portability. Last, we call for improving data literacy among stakeholders, which is a possible path for closing the gap between regulations and effective enforcement by promoting an understanding of data portability.

    AI-driven civil litigation: Navigating the right to a fair trial

    Seyhan SelcukNesibe Kurt KoncaSerkan Kaya
    106136.1-106136.11页
    查看更多>>摘要:The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into legal proceedings has gained significant traction in recent years, particularly following the Covid-19 pandemic. As part of the broader movement toward the digitalization of legal systems, AI is seen as a tool to improve access to justice, enhance efficiency, and adopt a human-centered approach. However, the rapid advancement of AI necessitates careful consideration of fundamental human rights, especially the right to a fair trial as enshrined in Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Recently, the European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act classifies AI systems used in the judiciary as high-risk, requiring impact assessments on fundamental rights, including the right to a fair trial. This paper explores the impact of Al-driven judicial tools on the right to a fair trial, focusing on key components such as the right to be heard, judicial independence, impartiality, and the principle of publicity. This paper explores the impact of Al-driven judicial tools on the right to a fair trial, focusing on key components such as the right to be heard, judicial independence, impartiality, and the principle of publicity, while examining the risks and opportunities posed by AI in civil litigation, including challenges like algorithmic discrimination, digital exclusion, and the potential erosion of human judges' cognitive abilities.

    Comparative analysis of trademark protection in the metaverse and registration of virtual goods and NFTs

    WooJung JonSung-Pil Park
    106137.1-106137.25页
    查看更多>>摘要:This study presents a comparative analysis of trademark protection in the metaverse and the registration of virtual goods and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) across three distinct legal systems: those of the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Korea. Drawing on recent case law and evolving administrative guidelines, this study examines how traditional trademark doctrines-such as the likelihood-of-confusion standard in the U.S. under the Lanham Act, source-identifying function under the UK Trade Marks Act 1994, and proactive legislative reforms implemented by the Korean Intellectual Property Office-are being adapted to address the challenges posed by digital and virtual environments. Specifically, this study analyzes landmark cases such as Hermes International v. Rothschild and Yuga Labs, Inc. v. Ripps, which illustrate the extension of trademark protection to NFTs and other digital assets, as well as the interplay between trademark rights and freedom of expression. It also evaluates recent updates to international classification frameworks-including the 2024 Nice Classification and the Madrid Protocol-and discusses their implications for ensuring uniformity and effective enforcement of trademarks in a borderless digital market. The findings reveal that while each jurisdiction applies its own legal traditions to metaverse trademark disputes, all share a common policy objective: to prevent consumer confusion and safeguard brand integrity in an increasingly digital economy. Ultimately, the study advocates for proactive registration of trademarks as virtual goods and NFTs to streamline enforcement and enhance legal certainty, thereby fostering innovation and facilitating global trade in virtual environments.