It is common knowledge that privacy in the market and the media is protected less in the United States than in Europe. Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, it has become obvious that the right to privacy in the government sphere too is protected less in the United States than in Europe. This Article brings alive the legal difference by considering the case-real in the United States, hypothetical in Europe-of a spy agency\u27s database of call records, created for the purpose of identifying potential terrorists. Under U.S. law such an antiterrorism database might very well be legal. But under European law the very same database would clearly be illegal. Numerous barriers to transatlantic cooperation on fighting terrorism and cr...
This Thesis seeks to give its reader the tools to understand the data privacy divide between the EU ...
This Article examines a recent twist in European Union ( EU ) data protection law. In the 1990s, the...
This article analyzes the differing perspectives that animate US and EU conceptions of privacy in th...
It is common knowledge that privacy in the market and the media is protected less in the United Stat...
The difference between European and American regulation of marketplace privacy is well-established: ...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
The United States’ Terrorism Surveillance Program represents just one of many expansions in surveill...
This paper examines recent controversies in the legal and policy debate between the U.S. and the EU ...
Among the wide variety of national and multinational legal regimes for protecting privacy, two domin...
Due to ever-growing big data and the ease with which information can be transmitted over the Interne...
The EU-US Passenger Name Record (PNR) agreement has been among the most controversial instruments in...
In the context of the US National Security Agency surveillance scandal, the transatlantic privacy di...
This article explores how internet surveillance in the name of counterterrorism challenges privacy. ...
While core principles for the fair treatment of personal information are common to democracies, priv...
Electronic surveillance is an important tool for law enforcement and may contribute to counter-terro...
This Thesis seeks to give its reader the tools to understand the data privacy divide between the EU ...
This Article examines a recent twist in European Union ( EU ) data protection law. In the 1990s, the...
This article analyzes the differing perspectives that animate US and EU conceptions of privacy in th...
It is common knowledge that privacy in the market and the media is protected less in the United Stat...
The difference between European and American regulation of marketplace privacy is well-established: ...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
The United States’ Terrorism Surveillance Program represents just one of many expansions in surveill...
This paper examines recent controversies in the legal and policy debate between the U.S. and the EU ...
Among the wide variety of national and multinational legal regimes for protecting privacy, two domin...
Due to ever-growing big data and the ease with which information can be transmitted over the Interne...
The EU-US Passenger Name Record (PNR) agreement has been among the most controversial instruments in...
In the context of the US National Security Agency surveillance scandal, the transatlantic privacy di...
This article explores how internet surveillance in the name of counterterrorism challenges privacy. ...
While core principles for the fair treatment of personal information are common to democracies, priv...
Electronic surveillance is an important tool for law enforcement and may contribute to counter-terro...
This Thesis seeks to give its reader the tools to understand the data privacy divide between the EU ...
This Article examines a recent twist in European Union ( EU ) data protection law. In the 1990s, the...
This article analyzes the differing perspectives that animate US and EU conceptions of privacy in th...