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Fundamental Rights Protection Online: The Future Regulation of Intermediaries

Edited by: Bilyana Petkova, Tuomas Ojanen

ISBN13: 9781788976671
Published: December 2020
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £121.00



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Fundamental Rights Protection Online presents an in-depth analysis of national, supranational and international attempts at online speech regulation, illustrating how the law has been unsettled on how to treat intermediaries.

In this book, expert contributors explore how problems ranging from disinformation to hate speech to copyright violations are framed and tackled though legislation, codes of conduct and judicial interpretation. The chapters discuss positive law developments in the intersection of intermediary liability and rights, considering both the history and current intellectual debates surrounding European and US legislative initiatives. In addition to examining how the European Union and individual European nations regulate speech online, the book also analyses the e-Commerce Directive, the case law of the European Court of Human Rights and principles established under the United Nations. It concludes that content regulation online is best captured by the notion of ‘speech curation’, involving both private and public actors.

Taking a human rights approach to online speech regulation, this timely book will be critical reading for academics and students of law, particularly those with an interest in internet law, information law and human rights. Its exploration of intermediary liability and fundamental rights will also be beneficial for legal practitioners working in online rights protection.

Subjects:
IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
Foreword: The Challenges of Change
Acknowledgments
IntroductionPreface: Fundamental Rights Protection Online: Curation v. Regulation? Bilyana Petkova and Tuomas Ojanen
Part I: Conceptual Issues
1. Metaphors and judicial frame: why legal imagination (also) matters in the protection of fundamental rights in the digital age
Oreste Pollicino
2. Filter Bubble and Human Rights
Christoph Bezemek
Part II: The National Law Approach
3. ‘What is illegal offline is also illegal online’ –The German Network Enforcement Act 2017
Thomas Wischmeyer
4. Protecting Liberal Democracy from Artificial Information: The French Proposal
Kamel Ajji
5. Mambo Italiano: The Perilous Italian way to ISP liability
Marco Bassini
6. A Consumer Protection Approach to Platform Content Moderation in the United States
Mark MacCarthy
Part III: Toward a European Law Approach?
7. The scandal of intermediary: Acknowledging the both/and dispensation for regulating hybrid actors
Sophie Stalla-Bourdillon and Robert Thorburn
8. Intermediaries in the case law of the Court of Justice of the EU: The interplay between liability exemptions and rules on IP protection
Alberto Miglio
9. Self-Regulation of Fundamental Rights? The EU Code of Conduct on Hate Speech, related initiatives and beyond
Teresa Quintel and Carsten Ullrich
10. EU proposal for a Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market: Compatibility of Draft Article 13 with the EU intermediary liability regime Aleksandra Kuczerawy
Part IV: Toward an International Law Approach?
11. The Liability of Internet Intermediaries and the European Court of Human Rights
Marta Maroni
12. A Business and Human Rights Perspective for Internet Intermediaries – The Case for Human Rights Due Diligence
Lia Heasman
Index