Don’t use face recognition to fight COVID: We need disease surveillance, not a surveillance state
By EVAN SELINGER and WOODROW HARTZOG Read more about Don’t use face recognition to fight COVID: We need disease surveillance, not a surveillance state
By EVAN SELINGER and WOODROW HARTZOG Read more about Don’t use face recognition to fight COVID: We need disease surveillance, not a surveillance state
Full paper available at GRUR International.
Abstract
Read more about Facebook Filters, Fundamental Rights, and the CJEU’s Glawischnig-Piesczek Ruling
On Monday, May 4, Google and Apple shared Read more about Privacy and New Google-Apple COVID-19 Tracing Technology
(Oxford University Press, edited by Giancarlo Frosio) Read more about The Oxford Handbook of Online Intermediary Liability
Before the novel coronavirus arrived on its shores, the United States had spent decades becoming a heavily digitized society. Now, the pandemic is deepening that dependence on digital technology, converting millions of in-person interactions into online communications. That dependence means good cybersecurity, including strong encryption, has become more crucial than ever.