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Cristina Amato, Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond, 12 (2021) JIPITEC 181 para 1.

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%0 Journal Article
%T Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond
%A Amato, Cristina
%J JIPITEC
%D 2021
%V 12
%N 2
%@ 2190-3387
%F amato2021
%X “Internet of Bodies” (IoB) is the new frontier of digital technologies challenging our lives as individuals and as a society. The European Union has not yet set up a coherent and complete regulatory framework dealing with the “Internet of Everything”. This paper aims at describing the possible implications of the new technologies in search for responsible legal reactions. After defining IoB and some uncomfortable problems raised by it, the paper faces the topic of what can law and policy do in order to provide a set of rules adequate for supporting sustainable data-driven technologies. The current legal framework is essentially designed by the Digital Content Directive, the Product Liability Directive and the product safety legislation framed into a multilevel layout, as set up by the New Legislative Framework and by the European Standardization System. The article argues that it is within this regulatory framework that new technologies should be controlled, although a substantial institutional revision of co-regulation in the light of plurality and transparency is still desirable.
%L 340
%K Digital Content Directive
%K ESS
%K IoB
%K NLF
%K Product liability Directive
%U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52859
%P 181-195

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Bibtex

@Article{amato2021,
  author = 	"Amato, Cristina",
  title = 	"Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond",
  journal = 	"JIPITEC",
  year = 	"2021",
  volume = 	"12",
  number = 	"2",
  pages = 	"181--195",
  keywords = 	"Digital Content Directive; ESS; IoB; NLF; Product liability Directive",
  abstract = 	"``Internet of Bodies'' (IoB) is the new frontier of digital technologies challenging our lives as individuals and as a society. The European Union has not yet set up a coherent and complete regulatory framework dealing with the ``Internet of Everything''. This paper aims at describing the possible implications of the new technologies in search for responsible legal reactions. After defining IoB and some uncomfortable problems raised by it, the paper faces the topic of what can law and policy do in order to provide a set of rules adequate for supporting sustainable data-driven technologies. The current legal framework is essentially designed by the Digital Content Directive, the Product Liability Directive and the product safety legislation framed into a multilevel layout, as set up by the New Legislative Framework and by the European Standardization System. The article argues that it is within this regulatory framework that new technologies should be controlled, although a substantial institutional revision of co-regulation in the light of plurality and transparency is still desirable.",
  issn = 	"2190-3387",
  url = 	"http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52859"
}

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RIS

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Amato, Cristina
PY  - 2021
DA  - 2021//
TI  - Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond
JO  - JIPITEC
SP  - 181
EP  - 195
VL  - 12
IS  - 2
KW  - Digital Content Directive
KW  - ESS
KW  - IoB
KW  - NLF
KW  - Product liability Directive
AB  - “Internet of Bodies” (IoB) is the new frontier of digital technologies challenging our lives as individuals and as a society. The European Union has not yet set up a coherent and complete regulatory framework dealing with the “Internet of Everything”. This paper aims at describing the possible implications of the new technologies in search for responsible legal reactions. After defining IoB and some uncomfortable problems raised by it, the paper faces the topic of what can law and policy do in order to provide a set of rules adequate for supporting sustainable data-driven technologies. The current legal framework is essentially designed by the Digital Content Directive, the Product Liability Directive and the product safety legislation framed into a multilevel layout, as set up by the New Legislative Framework and by the European Standardization System. The article argues that it is within this regulatory framework that new technologies should be controlled, although a substantial institutional revision of co-regulation in the light of plurality and transparency is still desirable.
SN  - 2190-3387
UR  - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52859
ID  - amato2021
ER  - 
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Wordbib

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ISI

PT Journal
AU Amato, C
TI Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond
SO JIPITEC
PY 2021
BP 181
EP 195
VL 12
IS 2
DE Digital Content Directive; ESS; IoB; NLF; Product liability Directive
AB “Internet of Bodies” (IoB) is the new frontier of digital technologies challenging our lives as individuals and as a society. The European Union has not yet set up a coherent and complete regulatory framework dealing with the “Internet of Everything”. This paper aims at describing the possible implications of the new technologies in search for responsible legal reactions. After defining IoB and some uncomfortable problems raised by it, the paper faces the topic of what can law and policy do in order to provide a set of rules adequate for supporting sustainable data-driven technologies. The current legal framework is essentially designed by the Digital Content Directive, the Product Liability Directive and the product safety legislation framed into a multilevel layout, as set up by the New Legislative Framework and by the European Standardization System. The article argues that it is within this regulatory framework that new technologies should be controlled, although a substantial institutional revision of co-regulation in the light of plurality and transparency is still desirable.
ER

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Mods

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  <titleInfo>
    <title>Internet Of Bodies: Digital Content Directive, And Beyond</title>
  </titleInfo>
  <name type="personal">
    <namePart type="family">Amato</namePart>
    <namePart type="given">Cristina</namePart>
  </name>
  <abstract>“Internet of Bodies” (IoB) is the new frontier of digital technologies challenging our lives as individuals and as a society. The European Union has not yet set up a coherent and complete regulatory framework dealing with the “Internet of Everything”. This paper aims at describing the possible implications of the new technologies in search for responsible legal reactions. After defining IoB and some uncomfortable problems raised by it, the paper faces the topic of what can law and policy do in order to provide a set of rules adequate for supporting sustainable data-driven technologies. The current legal framework is essentially designed by the Digital Content Directive, the Product Liability Directive and the product safety legislation framed into a multilevel layout, as set up by the New Legislative Framework and by the European Standardization System. The article argues that it is within this regulatory framework that new technologies should be controlled, although a substantial institutional revision of co-regulation in the light of plurality and transparency is still desirable.</abstract>
  <subject>
    <topic>Digital Content Directive</topic>
    <topic>ESS</topic>
    <topic>IoB</topic>
    <topic>NLF</topic>
    <topic>Product liability Directive</topic>
  </subject>
  <classification authority="ddc">340</classification>
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        <start>181</start>
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  <identifier type="issn">2190-3387</identifier>
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  <identifier type="citekey">amato2021</identifier>
</mods>
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Full Metadata

JIPITEC – Journal of Intellectual Property, Information Technology and E-Commerce Law
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