Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Price: £449.99

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


NEW EDITION Pre-order The Law of Rights of Light 2nd ed



 Jonathan Karas


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Internet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies


ISBN13: 9781138604797
Published: October 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00



Low stock.

Also available as

TheInternet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies is the most comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the legal issues in the Internet of Things (IoT).

For decades, the decreasing importance of tangible wealth and power – and the corresponding increasing significance of their disembodied counterparts – has been the subject of much legal analysis. For some time now, legal scholars have grappled with how laws drafted for tangible property and pre-digital ‘offline’ technologies can cope with dematerialisation, digitalisation, and the internet. As dematerialisation continues, this book aims to illuminate the opposite movement: re-materialisation, namely the return of data, knowledge, and power within a physical ‘smart’ world. This move frames the book’s central question: can the law steer re-materialisation in a human-centric and societally beneficial direction?

To answer it, the book focuses on the IoT, the socio-technological phenomenon that is primarily responsible for this shift. After a thorough analysis of how existing laws can be interpreted to empower IoT end-users, Noto La Diega leaves us with the fundamental question of what happens when the law fails us and concludes with a call for collective resistance against ‘smart’ capitalism.

Subjects:
IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
Introduction
Chapter 1 – IoT Law: Obstacles and Alternatives in the Regulation of a Non-Binary Socio-Technological Phenomenon
Chapter 2 – The Internet of Spying Sex Toys, Killer Petrol Stations, and Manipulative Toasters. A View of Private Ordering from the Contractual Quagmire
Chapter 3 – The Internet of Contracts. The Tension between Consumer Contract Laws and IoT Power Imbalance
Chapter 4 – The Internet of Vulnerabilities. Tackling Human and Product Vulnerabilities through Non-Contractual Consumer Laws
Chapter 5 – The Internet of Loos, the General Data Protection Regulation, and Digital Dispossession under Surveillance Capitalism
Chapter 6 – The Internet of Things (You Don’t Own) under Bourgeois Law. An Integrated Tactic to Rebalance Intellectual Property
Conclusions