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EU digital law in the AI era
~
Synodinou, Tatiana-Helenē.
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EU digital law in the AI era
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
EU digital law in the AI era/ edited by Tatiana-Eleni Synodinou ... [et al.].
other author:
Synodinou, Tatiana-Helenē.
Published:
Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland : : 2025.,
Description:
vi, 291 p. :ill. (some col.), digital ;24 cm.
[NT 15003449]:
1. Introduction -- 2. The AI Liability Puzzle: Rethinking Defective Product Liability for AI -- 3. Regulating algorithmic management of work at EU level: The adequacy of the Platform Work Directive and the AI Act -- 4. EU Digital Law in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Era: Towards a new privacy maturity methodology -- 5. The impact of AI on data protection: Evolution of Court of Justice of the European Union case law regarding the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the Artificial Intelligence era -- 6. Building Transparent Smart Cities: Informational self-determination in interconnected ecosystems -- 7. The EU right of communication to the public against creativity in the digital world: a conflict at the crossroads? -- 8. IP Protection for AI-generated Content in the "Post - AI Act" Era -- 9. Data as remuneration in digital copyright licensing: some reflections on the concept of 'appropriate and proportionate remuneration' under art. 18 EU Directive 2019/790 in the data era -- 10. Vulnerable Consumers in the Digital Era: How the UCTD Can Evolve to Combat Tech Exploitation? -- 11. Consumer protection in the AI era. A first reading of the proposal for the AI Liability Directive -- 12. Lawful interception of communications, serious crimes and the EU law -- 13. e-Evidence Regulation: a contemporary Trojan Horse in Criminal Proceedings? -- 14. ChatGPT, a life-changing phenomenon with cyber-security implications.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Artificial intelligence - Law and legislation - European Union countries. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-96743-6
ISBN:
9783031967436
EU digital law in the AI era
EU digital law in the AI era
[electronic resource] /edited by Tatiana-Eleni Synodinou ... [et al.]. - Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :2025. - vi, 291 p. :ill. (some col.), digital ;24 cm.
1. Introduction -- 2. The AI Liability Puzzle: Rethinking Defective Product Liability for AI -- 3. Regulating algorithmic management of work at EU level: The adequacy of the Platform Work Directive and the AI Act -- 4. EU Digital Law in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Era: Towards a new privacy maturity methodology -- 5. The impact of AI on data protection: Evolution of Court of Justice of the European Union case law regarding the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the Artificial Intelligence era -- 6. Building Transparent Smart Cities: Informational self-determination in interconnected ecosystems -- 7. The EU right of communication to the public against creativity in the digital world: a conflict at the crossroads? -- 8. IP Protection for AI-generated Content in the "Post - AI Act" Era -- 9. Data as remuneration in digital copyright licensing: some reflections on the concept of 'appropriate and proportionate remuneration' under art. 18 EU Directive 2019/790 in the data era -- 10. Vulnerable Consumers in the Digital Era: How the UCTD Can Evolve to Combat Tech Exploitation? -- 11. Consumer protection in the AI era. A first reading of the proposal for the AI Liability Directive -- 12. Lawful interception of communications, serious crimes and the EU law -- 13. e-Evidence Regulation: a contemporary Trojan Horse in Criminal Proceedings? -- 14. ChatGPT, a life-changing phenomenon with cyber-security implications.
This book engages with the shifting legal terrain of the European Union in light of recent advances in generative Artificial Intelligence. It reflects on the ways in which existing legal frameworks, developed over several decades, are being tested by technologies that operate with increasing autonomy, complexity, and opacity. Rather than treating AI as a singular phenomenon, the volume brings together diverse perspectives to examine how law responds across different domains such as liability, data protection, intellectual property, and digital security. The contributions draw from a range of legal traditions and critical approaches. Some chapters focus on how rules on defective products must evolve to account for autonomous behaviour. Others explore new forms of labour governance shaped by automated decision-making, as well as privacy concerns that require novel safeguards tailored to the evolving capacities of AI systems. The book also turns to the field of data protection, observing the ways in which judicial reasoning under the GDPR is adjusting to the demands of machine learning. This is complemented by a reflection on the role of design in ensuring transparency and accountability within digital urban infrastructures. Copyright law is addressed in a chapter that examines how the rise of AI-generated content unsettles long-standing concepts of authorship, originality, and ownership. It questions whether current intellectual property regimes remain adequate and considers the legal implications of using data as a form of remuneration in digital creative markets. Consumer protection is examined through a fresh lens, particularly where AI systems influence contracts, choices, or vulnerabilities. The discussion includes early insights into proposals on AI liability and considers the risks facing users in increasingly automated environments. Legal responses to cybercrime and digital surveillance are also discussed, including the place of interception measures and the admissibility of electronic evidence. The broader implications of large-scale language models for digital resilience and public security are critically assessed. Rather than offering a fixed map, the volume encourages a more dynamic reading of European digital law in the age of AI. It speaks to lawyers, researchers, and institutional actors concerned with how legal orders can hold firm to foundational principles while adjusting to the realities of emerging technologies. Each chapter invites the reader to reflect not only on where law stands, but also on where it may, and should, go next.
ISBN: 9783031967436
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-96743-6doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
3663658
Artificial intelligence
--Law and legislation--European Union countries.
LC Class. No.: KJE959.5.C65
Dewey Class. No.: 343.4099
EU digital law in the AI era
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1. Introduction -- 2. The AI Liability Puzzle: Rethinking Defective Product Liability for AI -- 3. Regulating algorithmic management of work at EU level: The adequacy of the Platform Work Directive and the AI Act -- 4. EU Digital Law in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Era: Towards a new privacy maturity methodology -- 5. The impact of AI on data protection: Evolution of Court of Justice of the European Union case law regarding the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the Artificial Intelligence era -- 6. Building Transparent Smart Cities: Informational self-determination in interconnected ecosystems -- 7. The EU right of communication to the public against creativity in the digital world: a conflict at the crossroads? -- 8. IP Protection for AI-generated Content in the "Post - AI Act" Era -- 9. Data as remuneration in digital copyright licensing: some reflections on the concept of 'appropriate and proportionate remuneration' under art. 18 EU Directive 2019/790 in the data era -- 10. Vulnerable Consumers in the Digital Era: How the UCTD Can Evolve to Combat Tech Exploitation? -- 11. Consumer protection in the AI era. A first reading of the proposal for the AI Liability Directive -- 12. Lawful interception of communications, serious crimes and the EU law -- 13. e-Evidence Regulation: a contemporary Trojan Horse in Criminal Proceedings? -- 14. ChatGPT, a life-changing phenomenon with cyber-security implications.
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This book engages with the shifting legal terrain of the European Union in light of recent advances in generative Artificial Intelligence. It reflects on the ways in which existing legal frameworks, developed over several decades, are being tested by technologies that operate with increasing autonomy, complexity, and opacity. Rather than treating AI as a singular phenomenon, the volume brings together diverse perspectives to examine how law responds across different domains such as liability, data protection, intellectual property, and digital security. The contributions draw from a range of legal traditions and critical approaches. Some chapters focus on how rules on defective products must evolve to account for autonomous behaviour. Others explore new forms of labour governance shaped by automated decision-making, as well as privacy concerns that require novel safeguards tailored to the evolving capacities of AI systems. The book also turns to the field of data protection, observing the ways in which judicial reasoning under the GDPR is adjusting to the demands of machine learning. This is complemented by a reflection on the role of design in ensuring transparency and accountability within digital urban infrastructures. Copyright law is addressed in a chapter that examines how the rise of AI-generated content unsettles long-standing concepts of authorship, originality, and ownership. It questions whether current intellectual property regimes remain adequate and considers the legal implications of using data as a form of remuneration in digital creative markets. Consumer protection is examined through a fresh lens, particularly where AI systems influence contracts, choices, or vulnerabilities. The discussion includes early insights into proposals on AI liability and considers the risks facing users in increasingly automated environments. Legal responses to cybercrime and digital surveillance are also discussed, including the place of interception measures and the admissibility of electronic evidence. The broader implications of large-scale language models for digital resilience and public security are critically assessed. Rather than offering a fixed map, the volume encourages a more dynamic reading of European digital law in the age of AI. It speaks to lawyers, researchers, and institutional actors concerned with how legal orders can hold firm to foundational principles while adjusting to the realities of emerging technologies. Each chapter invites the reader to reflect not only on where law stands, but also on where it may, and should, go next.
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based on 0 review(s)
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