Description |
1 online resource (31 pages) |
Contents |
Executive summary. -- Introduction. -- The challenge of extraterritorial data. -- The threat of data localization. -- A new approach to data flow controls. -- Recommendations. -- Additional challenges. -- Conclusion. -- Notes |
Summary |
The Internet, and the global free flow of data that it has enabled, has undercut long-standing legal, normative, and procedural arrangements governing the control of information. Governments are finding that prior methods of controlling information--such as those used to protect privacy, enforce intellectual property rights, and provide law enforcement access to information for criminal cases--are increasingly being challenged by the hard reality that data today recognizes no national borders. Through an analysis of the most notable legal, policy, and diplomatic challenges emerging out of the globalization of data--and the various responses to those challenges--this paper makes the case that the international community ought to reject geographic-based data control frameworks. Alternatively, it argues, nations should adopt jurisdictional and operational frameworks that are geography-agnostic and premised instead on data flow "control points," the levers of control over a particular information system. The paper offers a control point framework for digital policymaking, which the authors derive from control point analysis and the contextual integrity model, two analytic methodologies designed to allow for technical policy discussions in computer engineering and digital privacy law, respectively. Finally, it proffers some recommendations for how the international community might harmonize various national approaches to digital law and policy in a way that is consistent with a control point approach |
Notes |
At head of title: Cybersecurity Initiative |
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"February 2018"--Cover |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 24-31) |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF cover page (New America, viewed March 18, 2018) |
Subject |
Data protection -- International cooperation
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Globalization.
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Privacy, Right of -- International cooperation
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Transborder data flow -- Government policy
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Intellectual property -- Protection -- International cooperation
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globalism.
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Data protection -- International cooperation.
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Globalization.
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Transborder data flow -- Government policy.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Noyes, Matthew, author
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New America Foundation, publisher.
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