ABSTRACT

This edited collection seeks to map the landscape of contemporary informational interests, to evaluate a range of recognised and putative rights and wrongs associated with modern information societies, and to consider how law, regulation, and governance should be deployed in response.

New technologies and new applications constantly disrupt our values, our framing of our world, and our sense of where we are and who we are. In our ‘information societies’, we entertain mixed hopes and expectations, as well as significant fears and concerns. At the root of these, there are a number of informational interests, on the basis of which certain rights are claimed and particular wrongs denounced. This book addresses these interests, considering them as relating primarily to the integrity of the informational ecosystem, to the accessibility, accuracy, and authenticity of public information, and to our individual ability to control the outward and inward flows of information that relates directly to ourselves. Covering a wide range of subjects, the book’s interrogation of our contemporary information society is oriented around two questions: first, whether the information society in which we live is the kind of society that we think it should be and, second, if not, what we can reasonably expect law, regulation, and governance to do in providing the basis for improving it.

This book will be of considerable interest to those working at the intersection of law and technology, as well as others concerned with the legal, political, and social aspects of our information society.

chapter Chapter 1|45 pages

Informational rights and informational wrongs

A tapestry for our times

part A|55 pages

Information society

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

By-design regulation and European Union law

Opportunities, challenges, and the road ahead

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Corporate regulation by information

Democratic deficit and overcoming the dangers of the new regulatory paradigm

part B|94 pages

Informational rights

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Data extractivism and public access to algorithms

Mapping the battleground of international digital trade

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

‘You AIn't seen nothing yet’

Arguments against the protectability of AI-generated outputs by copyright law

chapter Chapter 7|18 pages

Informational rights

Puzzles of co-production in 3D printing

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

Packaging prenatal tests and information for pregnant women

Enhancement or dilution of informational interests?

part C|82 pages

Informational wrongs

chapter Chapter 11|17 pages

Obtaining information from an overmighty subject

The parliamentary experience

chapter Chapter 13|19 pages

The legal regulation of transgender personal data

Transgender history and disclosure

part D|106 pages

Informational rights, informational wrongs

chapter Chapter 14|26 pages

Adoptees and their unknown genetic inheritance

An informational right or (and) an informational wrong?

chapter Chapter 15|14 pages

Informational rights, informational wrongs

Regulating connected car data access and use for telematics insurance in Europe

chapter Chapter 17|28 pages

A short history of information policies