01377nam--2200409---450-99000216692020331620091111142534.00-87003-171-6000216692USA01000216692(ALEPH)000216692USA0100021669220041112d1999----km-y0enga50------baengUSy---z---001yyGetting it wrongregional cooperation and the Commonwealth of Independent StatesMartha Brill Olcott, Anders Aslund and Sherman W. GarnettWashington, D.CCarnegie Endowment for International Peacecopyr. 1999VIII, 271 p.[1] c. geogr.23 cm20012001001------2001Comunità degli stati indipendentiPolitica economica327.170947OLCOTT,Brill568553ASLUND,Anders556434GARNETT,Sherman W.568554ITsalbcISBD990002166920203316XXIII.2.D. 181 (IG VIII 10 ING 836)44698 G.XXIII.2.D. 181 (IG VIII 10 ING)00115184BKGIUMARIA1020041112USA011317IANNONE9020050725USA011329RSIAV49020091111USA011425Getting it wrong1038008UNISA05470nam 22007575 450 991091778110332120250717133441.09789462656390946265639810.1007/978-94-6265-639-0(CKB)37037007500041(MiAaPQ)EBC31849682(Au-PeEL)EBL31849682(DE-He213)978-94-6265-639-0(EXLCZ)993703700750004120241217d2024 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDigital Governance Confronting the Challenges Posed by Artificial Intelligence /edited by Kostina Prifti, Esra Demir, Julia Krämer, Klaus Heine, Evert Stamhuis1st ed. 2024.The Hague :T.M.C. Asser Press :Imprint: T.M.C. Asser Press,2024.1 online resource (300 pages)Information Technology and Law Series,2215-1966 ;399789462656383 946265638X Chapter 1. Introduction -- Part I. Disruptive effects of AI.-Chapter 2. The doctor and the missing link: medical liability and causation in the age of AI -- Chapter 3. When the kids aren’t alright: the use of facial recognition technologies at school -- Chapter 4. Emotional Artificial Intelligence: Introducing the Concept of ‘Emotional Privacy’ -- Chapter 5. Open banking in the EU: consumer utopia or dystopiaEugerta Muçi -- Chapter 6. Problematising user control in the context of digital identity wallets and European Digital Identity Framework -- Chapter 7. AI in the Workplace: Regulating Explainability and Consent in Algorithmic Management -- Part II. Designing legal solutions for digital governance -- Chapter 8. AI Acts' Ripple Effect on Biometric Data: Harmonising or Fragmenting the Biometric Data Regulation? -- Chapter 9. The Rule of Law for Artificial Intelligence in Public Administration: A System Safety Perspective -- Chapter 10. Towards formalizing AI readiness of standards -- Chapter 11. Regulating LegalTech: a phenomenological perspective -- Chapter 12. Codes of Conduct in the Digital Services Act: Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges -- Chapter 13. Rethinking Algorithmic Explainability Through the Lenses of Intellectual Property and Competition -- Chapter 14. Conclusions.This book explores the structure and frameworks of digital governance, focusing on various regulatory patterns, with the aim of tackling the disruptive impact of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies. Addressing the various challenges posed by AI technologies, this book explores potential avenues for crafting legal remedies and solutions, spanning liability of AI, platform governance, and the implications for data protection and privacy. The book is valuable for audiences with or without a technological background. Primarily, it targets academic scholars from a variety of disciplines, including law, ethics, sociology, political science, economics, computer science, and engineering. Particularly, academics interested in interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary studies would benefit from the mixture of disciplines in the book. The scholarly insights in this work are valuable also for policymakers and civil society, by providing potential guidance for effective AI regulation. Additionally, the book can be useful to private companies and organisations that are involved in designing AI applications, offering practical insights and guidance about the legal and societal implications of AI. Kostina Prifti, Esra Demir and Julia Krämer are PhD candidates at Erasmus School of Law, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Klaus Heine is Professor of Law and Economics at Erasmus School of Law, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Evert Stamhuis is Professor of Law and Innovation at Erasmus School of Law, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Chapter 2, Chapter 6, Chapter 10, and Chapter 13 are available open access under a via link.springer.com.Information Technology and Law Series,2215-1966 ;39Information technologyLaw and legislationMass mediaLaw and legislationArtificial intelligenceLawEuropeInformation technologyMoral and ethical aspectsBusiness information servicesIT Law, Media Law, Intellectual PropertyArtificial IntelligenceEuropean LawInformation EthicsIT in BusinessInformation technologyLaw and legislation.Mass mediaLaw and legislation.Artificial intelligence.LawInformation technologyMoral and ethical aspects.Business information services.IT Law, Media Law, Intellectual Property.Artificial Intelligence.European Law.Information Ethics.IT in Business.343.099Prifti Kostina1779977Demir Esra1779978Krämer Julia1779979Heine Klaus270285Stamhuis Evert1779980MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910917781103321Digital Governance4303641UNINA