The CLSR is an international journal of technology law and practice. It has been published since 1985 and is the leading journal of its kind in Europe.
Our IF is now 2,980 (IF 2020). In 2019 it was 1,849.
Thanks to our great authors and excellent reviewers who with their anonymous work help us to select the most promising articles and help our authors to improve their papers for a greater impact on the scientific debate
An evidence-based methodology for #HumanRights impact assessment (#HRIA) in the development of #AI data-intensive systems by @mantelero and @MSamantha_E
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/fJdGLwRtGb
Why #fairness cannot be automated: Bridging the gap between EU non-discrimination law and #AI by @SandraWachter5, @b_mittelstadt and Chris Russell
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/zUkVRedzjW
Cybersecurity, safety and robots: Strengthening the link between #cybersecurity and safety in the context of care robots by @eduardfosch and TobiasMahler
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/XEwBC8aijU
Can the GDPR make data flow for research easier? Yes it can, by differentiating! by @ComandeGiovanni & G.Schneider
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/VAqzg29upx
Automated administrative decision-making under the influence of the GDPR – Early reflections and upcoming challenges by @geburczyk
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/FKzS03MvnJ
Rosa M.Garcia-Teruel and Héctor Simón-Moreno. The digital tokenization of property rights. A comparative perspective
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/5RbhoYKJ0Y
Janos Meszaros and Chih-hsing Ho. #AI research and data protection: Can the same rules apply for commercial and academic research under the #GDPR?
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/3fqxMdJFco
The regulatory framework for the protection of critical infrastructures against cyberthreats: Identifying shortcomings and addressing future challenges: The case of the health sector in particular by Dimitra Markopoulou and @vpapakonst
[CLSR, 41, 2021]
https://t.co/YDGFyZnkd1
The two judgments of the European Court of Justice in the four cases of Privacy International, La Quadrature du Net and Others, French Data Network and Others and Ordre des Barreaux francophones et germanophone and Others by Xavier Tracol
[CLSR, 41, 2021]
https://t.co/rFCjBTWiRU
Government procurement law and hacking technology: The role of public contracting in regulating an invisible market by @sienaanstis
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/o2LgXTErFe
The dual function of explanations: Why it is useful to compute explanations by Niko Tsakalakis, @SophieStallaB, Laura Carmichael, Trung Dong Huynh, @lucmoreau, and Ayah Helal
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/PwUlrrQQcz
Fei Fenga, Xia Wang, and Tianxiang Chen. Analysis of the attributes of rights to inferred information and China's choice of legal regulation
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/6sc9CZUDHQ
Joke Baeck and Ignace Claeys. Restitution of money spent on loot boxes in #videogames ?
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/5ee2ukRaCi
Pratik Prakash Dixit. From gatekeepers to publishers: Liability of internet intermediaries in #India for hosting defamatory content
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/5NaS5ngCn9
Smartphone platforms as privacy regulators
by @jorisvanhoboken and R Ó Fathaigh
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/YaLfwcSOLq
Taming digital gatekeepers: the ‘more regulatory approach’ to #antitrust law by Marco Cappai and @3dcondor
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/cLMW2wlTVW
Maciej Rogalski. Security assessment of suppliers of telecommunications infrastructure for the provision of services in #5G technology
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/iu8JhnQgrp
Shujie Cui and Peng Qi. The legal construction of personal information protection and privacy under the Chinese Civil Code
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/bDAxkByOIY
Decision-making by machines: Is the ‘Law of Everything’ enough? by @a_a_tamo
[Computer Law & Security Review, 41, July 2021]
https://t.co/pASwclnXcM