The Networking Dead: An Attempt to Define Statutory Third-Party Publicity Rights in Digital Estates

Mark A. Morenz-Harbinger
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Abstract

With the advent of social networking, one’s online identity and their personal information become embedded within the online personas of others. One problem of digital estates is this: Consider the personal information of third-parties such as: i) families of the deceased concerned with privacy, or ii) those consociates who have “friended” the deceased online or who, perhaps, are the subject-matter of the deceased’s copyrighted content, e.g., such as photographs. How is that shared information of those parties protected, even after the deceased has passed? In Europe, there are “fair information practice” standards codified by law. Regardless of whether the information is held by the government or private entities, European citizens have legal rights to prevent their personal information from being misused. The United States has no such comprehensive protection for its citizens.Nor will contract law provide U.S. citizens comparable substantive rights under a third-party beneficiary theory. The law of torts will instead be explored to clarify the public policy rationales that have been successful in underpinning privacy and limitations over publication of personal information. But, also and especially, the law of property will be investigated. This is in line with leading scholars who have posited that property interests could be a viable way to internalize the costs of information to those who would primarily benefit from that information. In Part I, we define the “third-parties” whose interests are at issue by tying the concept to those whose personally identifiable information has been captured. In Part II, we analyze the existing obstacles and loopholes that serve to vitiate end-users rights to their own data. We also propose that at least one way to avoid those pitfalls is to formalize a property right in a person’s data from the onset. In Part III, we analyze certain exemplars which can be used to fashion a better regulatory scheme, based on such a property right. Part IV concludes, while an appendix contains a sample code wherein a jurisdiction might attempt to implement our suggested solution.
网络死亡:界定数字遗产中法定第三方公示权的尝试
随着社交网络的出现,一个人的在线身份和个人信息嵌入到其他人的在线角色中。数字遗产的一个问题是:考虑第三方的个人信息,例如:i)关心隐私的死者家属,或ii)在网上与死者“加为好友”的同事,或者可能是死者受版权保护的内容(例如照片)的主体。即使在死者去世后,这些当事人的共享信息如何受到保护?在欧洲,有“公平信息实践”的标准被编纂成法律。无论这些信息是由政府还是私人实体持有,欧洲公民都有法律权利防止他们的个人信息被滥用。美国对其公民没有这样全面的保护。根据第三方受益人理论,合同法也不会为美国公民提供类似的实质性权利。相反,我们将探讨侵权行为法,以澄清在保护隐私和限制个人信息发布方面取得成功的公共政策依据。但是,特别地,财产法也将被研究。这与一些著名学者的假设一致,他们认为财产利益可能是一种可行的方式,可以将信息成本内部化,转嫁给那些主要从信息中受益的人。在第一部分中,我们通过将“第三方”概念与那些个人身份信息被捕获的人联系起来,定义了其利益受到争议的“第三方”。在第二部分中,我们分析了现有的障碍和漏洞,这些障碍和漏洞损害了最终用户对自己数据的权利。我们还建议,至少有一种避免这些陷阱的方法是从一开始就将个人数据的产权正式化。在第三部分,我们分析了一些例子,这些例子可以用来形成一个更好的基于这种产权的监管方案。第四部分是结论,而附录包含一个示例代码,其中一个司法管辖区可能会尝试实施我们建议的解决方案。
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