Annotatie bij Geschillencommissie Auteurscontractenrecht 27 juli 2018 (Soof 2) external link

AMI, vol. 2018, num: 5, pp: 213-215, 2018

auteurscontractenrecht, Auteursrecht, film, frontpage, royalties

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Tentoonstellen van ongepubliceerde brieven: Annotatie bij Hof Amsterdam 6 februari 2018 (Anne Frank Stichting / Anne Frank-Fonds) external link

AMI, vol. 2018, num: 5, pp: 203-206, 2018

Auteursrecht, frontpage, openbaarmaking

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Stedelijk is nog altijd beschadigd external link

frontpage

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Media reporting: facts, nothing but facts? external link

Alén-Savikko, A., Apa, E., Bassini, M., Cabrera Blázquez, F.J., Cunningham, I., Etteldorf, C., Granchet, A., Klimkiewicz, B., Fahy, R., Polák, J., Prosser, T., Richter, A. & Rodriguez, N.
2018

Abstract

Separating the facts from the fiction in today’s media is becoming mission impossible. In the era of the #fakenews hashtag, the internet, and the media in general, are concerned by the emergence of fiction which is sometimes much stranger than truth! So what rules and initiatives exist in Europe to help ensure the accuracy and objectivity of news and current affairs reporting? How far can the European and the various national legislators go to protect us from dubious reporting or at least ensure that codes of good conduct exist?

Fake news, frontpage, Mediarecht

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The WIPO Broadcasting Treaty. A Conceptual Conundrum external link

Abstract

Keynote at KEI Seminar, Appraising the WIPO Broadcast Treaty and its Implications on Access to Culture, Geneva 3-4 October 2018

Auteursrecht, broadcasting treaty, frontpage, Naburige rechten, omroepen, WIPO

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My Friends, Editors, Algorithms, and I: Examining audience attitudes to news selection external link

Thurman, N., Möller, J., Helberger, N. & Trilling, D.
Digital Journalism, vol. 2018, 2018

Abstract

Prompted by the ongoing development of content personalization by social networks and mainstream news brands, and recent debates about balancing algorithmic and editorial selection, this study explores what audiences think about news selection mechanisms and why. Analysing data from a 26-country survey (N = 53,314), we report the extent to which audiences believe story selection by editors and story selection by algorithms are good ways to get news online and, using multi-level models, explore the relationships that exist between individuals’ characteristics and those beliefs. The results show that, collectively, audiences believe algorithmic selection guided by a user’s past consumption behaviour is a better way to get news than editorial curation. There are, however, significant variations in these beliefs at the individual level. Age, trust in news, concerns about privacy, mobile news access, paying for news, and six other variables had effects. Our results are partly in line with current general theory on algorithmic appreciation, but diverge in our findings on the relative appreciation of algorithms and experts, and in how the appreciation of algorithms can differ according to the data that drive them. We believe this divergence is partly due to our study’s focus on news, showing algorithmic appreciation has context-specific characteristics.

algoritmes, curation, filtering, frontpage, gatekeeping, Journalistiek, Mediarecht, personalization, recommender systems, user tracking

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Dream of Californication: welcome to the Californian Consumer Privacy Act external link

Williams, J. & Irion, K.
Internet Policy Review, vol. 2018, 2018

Abstract

The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), slated to enter into force on 1 January 2020, borrows some cutting edge ideas from the EU and others’ privacy regimes while also experimenting with new approaches to data privacy. Importantly, the CCPA envisages an online advertisement market in which business are prevented from “getting high on information,” 1 breaches are promptly notified, and consumers are autonomous participants with the ability to sell their data at will. Where the CCPA breaks new ground is in protecting consumers from retaliation for opting out of the sale of their data. Thus, if it lives up to its potential, the CCPA could catalyse a permanent restructuring of the online data mining business. Our contribution will shed light on the new CCPA and offer some observations in comparing it with EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

California, Consumer Privacy, frontpage, General Data Protection Regulation, Internet

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Het privacy-argument tegen de Dopamine Machine external link

Privacy & Informatierecht, vol. 2018, num: 2, pp: 39-41, 2018

Abstract

De kinderen van Apple-baas Steve Jobs mochten geen iPad gebruiken. 1 Maar Jobs was niet de enige. Veel techies in Silicon Valley zijn zich bewust van de verslavende effecten van IT – ze hebben de producten namelijk zelf ontwikkeld. En nu steeds meer spijtoptanten oproepen tot regulering van onlinediensten zoals Facebook, vraag ik me af: welke rol kan het privacyrecht daarbij spelen?

onlinediensten, Privacy, Regulering

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Draconische Europese censuurwetten geen oplossing voor onwenselijke informatie online external link

Het Financieele Dagblad, vol. 2018, 2018

censuur, frontpage, Mediarecht

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Eerste Snowden-uitspraak van Europees Hof helpt tegenstanders Nederlandse sleepwet nauwelijks external link

Het Financieele Dagblad, vol. 2018, 2018

inlichtingenwet, sleepwet, Snowden, Telecommunicatierecht

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