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Computer Law & Security Review, Volume 42
Volume 42, September 2021
- Stanislaw Piasecki, Lachlan Urquhart, Derek McAuley:
Defence against the dark artefacts: Smart home cybercrimes and cybersecurity standards. 105542 - Onur Sari, Sener Celik:
Legal evaluation of the attacks caused by artificial intelligence-based lethal weapon systems within the context of Rome statute. 105564 - Jennifer Cobbe, Jatinder Singh:
Artificial intelligence as a service: Legal responsibilities, liabilities, and policy challenges. 105573 - Radina Stoykova:
Digital evidence: Unaddressed threats to fairness and the presumption of innocence. 105575 - Rebecca Ong, Sandy Sabapathy:
Hong Kong's data breach notification scheme: From the stakeholders' perspectives. 105579 - Emmanouil Bougiakiotis:
One law to rule them all? The reach of EU data protection law after the Google v CNIL case. 105580 - Yong Wan, Hongxuyang Lu:
Copyright protection for AI-generated outputs: The experience from China. 105581 - Huaiyin Zhang, Yanhong Lou, Kui Cai:
Research on the dilemma and improvement of legal regulation for unfair competition related to corporate data in China. 105582 - Marc P. Hauer, Johannes Kevekordes, Maryam Amir Haeri:
Legal perspective on possible fairness measures - A legal discussion using the example of hiring decisions. 105583 - Pawel Nowik:
Electronic personhood for artificial intelligence in the workplace. 105584 - Razvan Rughinis, Cosima Rughinis, Simona Nicoleta Vulpe, Daniel Rosner:
From social netizens to data citizens: Variations of GDPR awareness in 28 European countries. 105585 - Benjamin Phillips:
UK further education sector journey to compliance with the general data protection regulation and the data protection act 2018. 105586 - Karl Stöger, David Schneeberger, Peter Kieseberg, Andreas Holzinger:
Legal aspects of data cleansing in medical AI. 105587 - Dennis Gibson, Clive Harfield:
Contradictions and inconsistencies in Australia's mandatory data breach notification laws. 105600 - Peicheng Wu, Charlie Xiao-chuan Weng, Sally-Ann Joseph:
Crossing the Rubicon? The implications of RCEP on anti-monopoly enforcement on dominant E-commerce platforms in China. 105608
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