Content area

Abstract

The trouble with European data protection law, as with Alfred Hitchcock's Harry, is that it is dead. The current legal reform will fail to revive it, since its three main objectives are based on fallacies. The first fallacy is the delusion that data protection law can give individuals control over their data, which it cannot. The second is the misconception that the reform simplifies the law, while in fact it makes compliance even more complex. The third is the assumption that data protection law should be comprehensive, which stretches data protection to the point of breaking and makes it meaningless law in the books. Unless data protection reform starts looking in other directions - going back to basics, playing other regulatory tunes on different instruments in other legal areas, and revitalising the spirit of data protection by stimulating best practices - data protection will remain dead. Or, worse perhaps, a zombie.

Details

Title
The trouble with European data protection law
Author
Bert-Jaap Koops
Pages
250 - 261
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Nov 2014
Publisher
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
ISSN
20443994
e-ISSN
20444001
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1619596098
Copyright
Copyright Oxford Publishing Limited(England) Nov 2014