The Quality of Life: Protecting Non-personal Interests and Non-personal Data in the Age of Big Data

IF 0.2 Q4 LAW
B. van der Sloot
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Under the current legal paradigm, the rights to privacy and data protection provide natural persons with subjective rights to protect their private interests, such as related to human dignity, individual autonomy and personal freedom. In principle, when data processing is based on non-personal or aggregated data or when such data processes have an impact on societal, rather than individual interests, citizens cannot rely on these rights. Although this legal paradigm has worked well for decades, it is increasingly put under pressure because Big Data processes are typically based indiscriminate rather than targeted data collection, because the high volumes of data are processed on an aggregated rather than a personal level and because the policies and decisions based on the statistical correlations found through algorithmic analytics are mostly addressed at large groups or society as a whole rather than specific individuals. This means that large parts of the data-driven environment are currently left unregulated and that individuals are often unable to rely on their fundamental rights when addressing the more systemic effects of Big Data processes. This article will discuss how this tension might be relieved by turning to the notion ‘quality of life’, which has the potential of becoming the new standard for the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) when dealing with privacy related cases.
生活质量:大数据时代保护非个人利益和非个人数据
在现行法律范式下,隐私权和数据保护法为自然人提供了保护其私人利益的主观权利,如涉及人的尊严、个人自主权和人身自由等。原则上,当数据处理基于非个人或汇总数据,或当此类数据处理对社会而非个人利益产生影响时,公民不能依赖这些权利。尽管这种法律模式几十年来一直运作良好,但它正日益受到压力,因为大数据处理通常是基于不分青红皂白而不是有针对性的数据收集,因为大量数据是在汇总而不是个人层面上处理的,因为通过算法分析发现的基于统计相关性的政策和决策主要针对的是大群体或整个社会,而不是特定的个人。这意味着数据驱动的环境中有很大一部分目前是不受监管的,个人在处理大数据过程的更系统性影响时,往往无法依靠自己的基本权利。本文将讨论如何通过转向“生活质量”这一概念来缓解这种紧张关系,这一概念有可能成为欧洲人权法院(ECtHR)在处理与隐私有关的案件时的新标准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
33.30%
发文量
25
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