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None of Your Business: World Data Flows, Electronic Commerce, & the European Privacy Directive by Peter P. Swire
$20.95
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Compilation of State and Federal Privacy Laws 02 with 08 Suppl by Robert Ellis Smith
$31.00
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The Right to Privacy by Ellen Alderman
$10.85
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Internet Privacy for Dummies by John R. Levine
$19.79
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The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America by Jeffrey Rosen
$11.05
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Data routinely collected includes your health, credit, marital, educational, and employment histories; the times and telephone numbers of every call you make and receive; the magazines you subscribe to and the books your borrow from the library; your cash'"withdrawals; your purchases by credit card or check; where you go on the Internet.
Governments have responded to these new challenges to personal privacy in a wide variety of ways. At one extreme, the European Union in 1995 enacted sweeping regulation to protect personal information; at the other extreme, privacy law in the United States and many other countries is fragmented, inconsistent, and offers little protection for privacy on the Internet and other electronic networks.
For all the passion that surrounds discussions about privacy, surprisingly little consensus exists about what privacy means, what values are served -- or compromised -- by extending further legal protection, and what principles should undergird a sensitive balancing of those values.
About the Author
Fred H. Cate, a nationally known expert on privacy law and electronic commerce, is professor of law at Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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