Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Anonymity (1)
- Boilerplate contract terms (1)
- Browsewrap (1)
- Cyber espionage (1)
- Cyberlaw (1)
-
- Data privacy (1)
- Data protection (1)
- Digital spying (1)
- FIP's (1)
- FIPs (1)
- Generativity (1)
- Information privacy (1)
- International cyber operations (1)
- Internet communication (1)
- Internet data-mining (1)
- Internet property (1)
- Legal ignorance (1)
- Online contracts (1)
- Online contractual consent (1)
- Online shopping (1)
- Privacy & technology (1)
- Robot-related privacy (1)
- Robotics (1)
- Software (1)
- Torts (1)
Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Law
Defining And Demystifying Automated Decision Systems, Rashida Richardson
Defining And Demystifying Automated Decision Systems, Rashida Richardson
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Five Approaches To Insuring Cyber Risks, Christopher C. French
Five Approaches To Insuring Cyber Risks, Christopher C. French
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Peeling Back The Onion Of Cyber Espionage After Tallinn 2.0, David A. Wallace, Amy H. Mccarthy, Mark Visger
Peeling Back The Onion Of Cyber Espionage After Tallinn 2.0, David A. Wallace, Amy H. Mccarthy, Mark Visger
Maryland Law Review
Tallinn 2.0 represents an important advancement in the understanding of international law’s application to cyber operations below the threshold of force. Its provisions on cyber espionage will be instrumental to states in grappling with complex legal problems in the area of digital spying. The law of cyber espionage as outlined by Tallinn 2.0, however, is substantially based on rules that have evolved outside of the digital context, and there exist serious ambiguities and limitations in its framework. This Article will explore gaps in the legal structure and consider future options available to states in light of this underlying mismatch.
Online Terms As In Terrorem Devices, Colin P. Marks
Online Terms As In Terrorem Devices, Colin P. Marks
Maryland Law Review
Online shopping has quickly replaced the brick-and-mortar experience for a large portion of the consuming public. The online transaction itself is rote: browse items, add them to your cart, and check out. Somewhere along the way, the consumer is likely made aware of (or at least exposed to) the merchant’s terms and conditions, via either a link or a pop-up box. Such terms and conditions have become so ubiquitous that most consumers would be hard-pressed to find a merchant that doesn’t try to impose them somewhere on their website. Though such terms and conditions are pervasive, most consumers do not …
The Error Theory Of Contract, Matthew A. Seligman
The Error Theory Of Contract, Matthew A. Seligman
Maryland Law Review
Many people have false beliefs about contract doctrine. That pervasive phenomenon has profound practical, theoretical, and normative implications that neither courts nor scholars have recognized. This Article will make three contributions to fill that gap. First, it will establish just how widespread the phenomenon is among non-lawyers. After synthesizing the existing evidence of false beliefs about contract law, it will contribute a new empirical study showing that between one-third and one-half of people falsely believe specific performance rather than damages is the remedy for breach.
The Article will then argue that people’s false beliefs about contract doctrine pose a fundamental …
Reviving The Public Trustee Concept And Applying It To Information Privacy Policy, Priscilla M. Regan
Reviving The Public Trustee Concept And Applying It To Information Privacy Policy, Priscilla M. Regan
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Averting Robot Eyes, Margot E. Kaminski, Matthew Rueben, William D. Smart, Cindy M. Grimm
Averting Robot Eyes, Margot E. Kaminski, Matthew Rueben, William D. Smart, Cindy M. Grimm
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Inadequate, Invaluable Fair Information Practices, Woodrow Hartzog
The Inadequate, Invaluable Fair Information Practices, Woodrow Hartzog
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Anonymous Internet, Bryan H. Choi
Tort Liability For Vendors Of Insecure Software: Has The Time Finally Come?, Michael D. Scott
Tort Liability For Vendors Of Insecure Software: Has The Time Finally Come?, Michael D. Scott
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.