We analyze personal data protection laws in the United States through the lenses of the economic theories of ex ante safety regulation, ex post liability and information disclosure. Specifically, we consider and contrast how legal and economic theories interpret privacy costs and the remedies to those costs. First, we introduce the general economic theories of ex ante regulation, ex post liability and information disclosure. Then, we present their causal relationships and show how they attempt to reduce possible privacy harms caused by a firm’s activity. We then scrutinize their impact by contrasting legal and economic doctrines. Finally, we provide deeper economic analysis of the three legal mechanisms and highlight conditions under which ...
Personal data is not only subject to exclusive rights that may generate significant economic benefit...
We provide a theoretical model of privacy in which data collection requires consumers consent and co...
The United States and European economies are both information economies, however, they have differen...
We provide an overview of the economic analysis of the protection and revelation of personal data. I...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
This chapter reviews economic analyses of privacy. We begin by scrutinizing the "free market" critiq...
Privacy law has languished for decades while the other information law doctrines have flourished. Th...
International audienceThe increasing digitalization of the economy and advances in data processing h...
International audienceThe increasing digitalization of the economy and advances in data processing h...
As the economic value of aggregating personal data has grown, so too have concerns over the economic...
We provide a theoretical model of privacy in which data collection requires consumers’ consent and c...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
This Article is the text of the John A. Sibley Lecture delivered on March 2, 1978, at the University...
In the United States today, substance abusers have greater privacy than web users and privacy has be...
Introduction II. Privacy A. Social and Business Issues B. Technologies for Privacy C. Regulation...
Personal data is not only subject to exclusive rights that may generate significant economic benefit...
We provide a theoretical model of privacy in which data collection requires consumers consent and co...
The United States and European economies are both information economies, however, they have differen...
We provide an overview of the economic analysis of the protection and revelation of personal data. I...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
This chapter reviews economic analyses of privacy. We begin by scrutinizing the "free market" critiq...
Privacy law has languished for decades while the other information law doctrines have flourished. Th...
International audienceThe increasing digitalization of the economy and advances in data processing h...
International audienceThe increasing digitalization of the economy and advances in data processing h...
As the economic value of aggregating personal data has grown, so too have concerns over the economic...
We provide a theoretical model of privacy in which data collection requires consumers’ consent and c...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
This Article is the text of the John A. Sibley Lecture delivered on March 2, 1978, at the University...
In the United States today, substance abusers have greater privacy than web users and privacy has be...
Introduction II. Privacy A. Social and Business Issues B. Technologies for Privacy C. Regulation...
Personal data is not only subject to exclusive rights that may generate significant economic benefit...
We provide a theoretical model of privacy in which data collection requires consumers consent and co...
The United States and European economies are both information economies, however, they have differen...