Showing results for v2024 20sheet 202024 scode korea ssouth 202024 v2024 20sheet ssouth 202024 202024 202024
Understanding-Privacy-CH1b
[…] proclaims that “the pri- vacy, private life, honor and image of people are inviolable”; South Africa declares that “[e]ver yone has the right to privacy”; and South Korea announces that “the privacy of no citizen shall be infringed.” 14 When privacy is not directly mentioned in constitutions, the courts of many countries have recognized […]
People_Can_Be_So_Fake
[…] becoming more and more important.” [FN93] Ro- bots are falling in price and will soon be widely available outside of standard markets (such as Japan and South Korea). The upshot of this trend, or set of trends, is that artificial social agents are being introduced into a variety of new con- texts–computers, mobile devices, […]
Narayanan-Ethical-Considerations-for-Web-based-Censorship-Measurement1
[…] distinct IP addresses in 170 countries, with China, India, the United Kingdom, and Brazil reporting at least 1,000 measurements, and more than 100 measurements from Egypt, South Korea, Iran, Pakistan, Turkey , and Saudi Arabia. Encore revealed valuable information about the censorship activities of these governments, but it did so by altering the behavior […]
futureofreputation-ch1
[…] When quoting from blog posts, I have occasionally corrected obvious typos and spelling errors. Preface viii It all began in realspace, on a subway train in South Korea. A young woman’s small dog pooped in the train. Other passengers asked her to clean it up, but she told them to mind their own business. […]
South Korea: The First Case Where the Personal Information Protection Act was Applied to an AI System
[…] Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA). This is the first time PIPC sanctioned an AI technology company for indiscriminate personal information processing. “Iruda” caused considerable controversy in South Korea in early January after complaints of the chatbot using vulgar and discriminatory racist, homophobic, and ableist language in conversations with users. The chatbot, which assumed the […]
Girot_Transferring
[…] data protection frameworks. This option is interesting to explore in Asia as leading personal information management certification schemes already operate in key jurisdictions like Japan or South Korea, and more recently in Singapore. In legal regimes where certification schemes are recognised or contemplated for data transfers the laws are broad enough to allow for […]
Transferring Personal Data in Asia – A Path To Legal Certainty And Regional Convergence-1
[…] data protection frameworks. This option is interesting to explore in Asia as leading personal information management certification schemes already operate in key jurisdictions like Japan or South Korea, and more recently in Singapore. In legal regimes where certification schemes are recognised or contemplated for data transfers the laws are broad enough to allow for […]
FPF in 2020: Adjusting to the Unexpected
[…] Privacy Shield, finding that 259 European-headquartered companies are active Privacy Shield participants. We released many papers and blog posts analyzing privacy legislation in the EU, Brazil, South Korea, Singapore, India, Canada, New Zealand and elsewhere. One example was the white paper published in May titled, New Decade, New Priorities: A summary of twelve European Data […]
South Korean Personal Information Protection Commission Announces Three-Year Data Protection Policy Plan
[…] 4) reinforce the PIPC’s leadership as a unified supervisory body. PIPC Chairman Yoon Jong-in also presented a report on the plan to the State Council of South Korea on November 24, 2020. The plan revises the “4th Personal Information Protection Plan” which was announced earlier in February 2020, and lays out the driving strategy […]
Bambauer-Ray Responsible Uses of Technology position statement
[…] Marshall College of Law [email protected] Early in the pandemic the aggressive use of extensive — and unnecessarily intrusiv e — digital (and physical) surveillance by China, South Korea and others created legitimate fear that governments across the globe might use public health as cover to expand surveillance in similar ways that national security was […]