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E-grāmata: Protection of Natural Persons with Regard to Automated Individual Decision-Making in the GDPR

  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Mar-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Kluwer Law International
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789403520537
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  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Mar-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Kluwer Law International
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789403520537
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Protection of Natural Persons with Regard to Automated Individual Decision-Making in the GDPR' describes and analyses the GDPR aimed at protecting natural persons with regard to automated individual decision-making. The book s objective is to examine whether this legislative act affords sufficient protection of natural persons with regard to such processing. Increasingly, algorithms regulate our lives. Personal data is routinely processed on an unprecedented scale in both private and public sectors. Thisshift from more subjective and less structured human decision-making processes to automated ones has provoked numerous concerns with regard to the rights and freedoms of natural persons affected. In particular, those attached to profiling that can lead to discrimination influencing crucial opportunities of individuals, such as the ability to obtain credit, insurance, education, a job or even medical treatment. To the extent that automated individual decision-making is based on personal data, in the European Union it is subject to the GDPR.
About the Author ix
Preface xv
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(36)
§1.01 Legal Background of the GDPR
1(3)
§1.02 Terminology
4(17)
[ A] Personal Data
4(2)
[ 1] Anonymous Information
6(1)
[ 2] Pseudonymisation
7(1)
[ B] Special Categories of Personal Data
8(1)
[ C] Controller
9(1)
[ D] Processor
9(1)
[ E] Processing
10(1)
[ F] Profiling
10(4)
[ G] Automated Individual Decision-Making
14(2)
[ H] Other Terms
16(1)
[ 1] Algorithm
16(1)
[ 2] Artificial Intelligence
17(1)
[ 3] Machine Learning
18(2)
[ 4] Big Data
20(1)
§1.03 Material Scope of Application of the GDPR
21(2)
§1.04 Territorial Scope of Application of the GDPR
23(4)
[ A] The Establishment Criterion
24(1)
[ B] The Targeting Criterion
25(2)
[ C] Processing in a Place Where Member State Law Applies by Virtue of Public International Law
27(1)
§1.05 Key Concerns Regarding Automated Individual Decision-Making
27(10)
[ A] Inaccurate Personal Data
28(1)
[ B] Inconclusive Personal Data
28(2)
[ C] Discriminatory Algorithms
30(4)
[ D] Lack of Transparency
34(3)
Chapter 2 Specific Provisions on Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making
37(26)
§2.01 Introductory Remarks
37(1)
§2.02 Legal Nature of the Right Not to Be Subject to Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making
38(2)
§2.03 Individual Decision
40(2)
§2.04 Solely Automated
42(4)
§2.05 Legal or Similarly Significant Effects
46(3)
[ A] Legal Effects
47(1)
[ B] Similarly Significant Effects
47(2)
§2.06 Exemptions from the Right Not to Be Subject to Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making
49(8)
[ A] Contract
50(2)
[ B] EU or Member State Law
52(2)
[ C] Data Subject's Explicit Consent
54(3)
§2.07 Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making Based on Special Categories of Personal Data
57(1)
§2.08 Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making Concerning Children
58(1)
§2.09 Interim Conclusions
59(4)
Chapter 3 Special Rights of the Data Subject with Regard to Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making
63(34)
§3.01 Introductory Remarks
63(1)
§3.02 Modalities for the Exercise of the Rights of the Data Subject
64(3)
§3.03 Right to Be Informed
67(5)
§3.04 Right of Access
72(2)
§3.05 Right to Explanation
74(8)
[ A] Right to Explanation Derived from the Right Not to Be Subject to Solely Automated Individual Decision-Making
75(3)
[ B] Right to Explanation Derived from the Right to Be Informed
78(1)
[ C] Right to Explanation Derived from the Right of Access
79(3)
§3.06 Right to Express Point of View
82(1)
§3.07 Right to Obtain Human Intervention
83(1)
§3.08 Right to Contest the Decision
84(1)
§3.09 The European Union or Member State Law Safeguards
85(1)
§3.10 Limitations to Algorithmic Transparency
86(7)
[ A] Intellectual Property Rights
87(1)
[ 1] Patent
88(1)
[ 2] Copyright
88(1)
[ 3] Trade Secrets
89(3)
[ B] Technical Obstacles
92(1)
§3.11 Interim Conclusions
93(4)
Chapter 4 General Provisions Relevant to Automated Individual Decision-Making
97(28)
§4.01 Introductory Remarks
97(1)
§4.02 Data Protection Principles
98(10)
[ A] Lawfulness, Fairness and Transparency Principle
98(4)
[ B] Purpose Limitation Principle
102(2)
[ C] Data Minimisation Principle
104(2)
[ D] Accuracy Principle
106(1)
[ E] Storage Limitation Principle
107(1)
§4.03 Data Protection by Design and by Default
108(2)
§4.04 Data Protection Impact Assessment
110(6)
§4.05 Certification
116(4)
§4.06 Codes of Conduct
120(1)
§4.07 Interim Conclusions
121(4)
Chapter 5 Rights of the Data Subject Relevant to Automated Individual Decision-Making
125(12)
§5.01 Introductory Remarks
125(1)
§5.02 Right to Be Informed
126(3)
§5.03 Right of Access
129(1)
§5.04 Right to Rectification
130(2)
§5.05 Right to Erasure
132(2)
§5.06 Right to Object
134(1)
§5.07 Interim Conclusions
135(2)
Chapter 6 Conclusions
137(4)
Bibliography 141(10)
Table of Cases 151(2)
Table of Treaties and Other Documents 153(6)
Index 159