Egalitarian digital privacy : image-based abuse and beyond / Tsachi Keren-Paz.
2023
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Details
Author
Title
Egalitarian digital privacy : image-based abuse and beyond / Tsachi Keren-Paz.
Added Corporate Author
Imprint
Bristol : Bristol University Press, 2023.
Printed
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 0000.
Copyright
2023
Description
1 online resource (272 pages).
Series
Law, society, policy series.
Formatted Contents Note
1. Definition and terminology
2. Theoretical framework and readership
3. The main contributions in terms of policy
4. The main theoretical/conceptual contributions
5. The main doctrinal contributions
6. Organization
2. Setting the Ground: The Intermediary Liability Debate and Framing Issues
1. Introduction
2. A primer of intermediary liability
3. Control and fairness in courts' decisions on intermediary liability
A. Control
B. Fairness
4. Situating the argument
3 First Principles and Occupiers' Liability: The Case against Immunity
1. Introduction
2. Control and knowledge of offline intermediaries: rejecting post notice immunity
A. Offline defamation
B. Occupiers liability and nuisance
3. Burden, control and fairness
A. Burden
B. Fairness: business model and complicity
4. Right to an effective remedy
5. Pre-notice liability
A. Active contribution to claimant's injury
B. Control beyond knowledge
4 Property and Privacy: The Case for Strict Liability
1. Introduction
2. Conflicts over title: nemo dat versus market overt
3. Similarities and differences: the intermediaries and the thing sold
4. The viewer's inferior claim ought to deny immunity to the intermediary
A. Immunity as expropriation
B. Asymmetrical harm
C. Risk taking and victim blaming
1. NCII victim blaming
2. Rejecting entrustment
D. An effective alternative remedy
E. Regressive redistribution
5. Policies in favour of merchant/intermediary liability
A. Efficiency
B. Fairness
C. Loss spreading
6. Doctrinal translation
5 Property and Privacy: Objections and Possible Extensions
1. Introduction
2. Privacy, property and inalienability
A. The Inalienability paradox
B. Why property?
C. We need to talk about (the harshness of) conversion
D. Consistency and transitivity
3. Competing quasi/proprietary interests
4. Possible extensions beyond NCII?
A. Private (sexual) information beyond images
B. Defamation and copyright
5. Conclusion
6 The Policy Debate: Uniqueness of Harm from NCII
1. Introduction
2. Harm from NCII
A. Severe, multifaceted, and irreparable
B. Gendered, systemic, a form of sexual abuse
1. Gendered
2. Systemic
3. Form of sexual abuse
3. NCII exceptionalism: the normative significance of irreparable gendered harm
A. Deprioritizing copyright
B. Privacy > Defamation
C. Just regulation
D. Theory of rights
1. Primary and secondary duties
2. Interim injunctions
3. Anticipatory injunctions
E. Gendered harm and broader egalitarian considerations
F. Policy implications.
2. Theoretical framework and readership
3. The main contributions in terms of policy
4. The main theoretical/conceptual contributions
5. The main doctrinal contributions
6. Organization
2. Setting the Ground: The Intermediary Liability Debate and Framing Issues
1. Introduction
2. A primer of intermediary liability
3. Control and fairness in courts' decisions on intermediary liability
A. Control
B. Fairness
4. Situating the argument
3 First Principles and Occupiers' Liability: The Case against Immunity
1. Introduction
2. Control and knowledge of offline intermediaries: rejecting post notice immunity
A. Offline defamation
B. Occupiers liability and nuisance
3. Burden, control and fairness
A. Burden
B. Fairness: business model and complicity
4. Right to an effective remedy
5. Pre-notice liability
A. Active contribution to claimant's injury
B. Control beyond knowledge
4 Property and Privacy: The Case for Strict Liability
1. Introduction
2. Conflicts over title: nemo dat versus market overt
3. Similarities and differences: the intermediaries and the thing sold
4. The viewer's inferior claim ought to deny immunity to the intermediary
A. Immunity as expropriation
B. Asymmetrical harm
C. Risk taking and victim blaming
1. NCII victim blaming
2. Rejecting entrustment
D. An effective alternative remedy
E. Regressive redistribution
5. Policies in favour of merchant/intermediary liability
A. Efficiency
B. Fairness
C. Loss spreading
6. Doctrinal translation
5 Property and Privacy: Objections and Possible Extensions
1. Introduction
2. Privacy, property and inalienability
A. The Inalienability paradox
B. Why property?
C. We need to talk about (the harshness of) conversion
D. Consistency and transitivity
3. Competing quasi/proprietary interests
4. Possible extensions beyond NCII?
A. Private (sexual) information beyond images
B. Defamation and copyright
5. Conclusion
6 The Policy Debate: Uniqueness of Harm from NCII
1. Introduction
2. Harm from NCII
A. Severe, multifaceted, and irreparable
B. Gendered, systemic, a form of sexual abuse
1. Gendered
2. Systemic
3. Form of sexual abuse
3. NCII exceptionalism: the normative significance of irreparable gendered harm
A. Deprioritizing copyright
B. Privacy > Defamation
C. Just regulation
D. Theory of rights
1. Primary and secondary duties
2. Interim injunctions
3. Anticipatory injunctions
E. Gendered harm and broader egalitarian considerations
F. Policy implications.
Summary
This book considers the social, legal and technological features of unauthorised dissemination of intimate images. With a focus on private law theory, the book defines the appropriate scope of liability of platforms and viewers. Through its analysis, it develops a new theory of egalitarian digital privacy.
Source of Description
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 18, 2023).
Access Note
Access restricted to subscribing institutions.
Language
English
ISBN
9781529214031 electronic book
1529214033 electronic book
9781529214017
1529214033 electronic book
9781529214017
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