. Hacking by law enforcement agencies, in the light of privacy and personal data protection: remarks about the European Union Study on Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement Pursuant to the Study on Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement, commissioned by the European Parliament at the request of the LIBE Committee and published in March 2017, the current is the ‘golden age of surveillance’. Thanks to the hacking tools, law enforcement agencies can acquire more personal data than they could ever previously. Considered that hacking practices can negatively affect the enjoyment of the right to privacy and personal data protection, the paper examines the LIBE Study, focusing on the requirements that domestic legislations in this field should comply with pursuant to the jurisprudence developed by the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice. In this context, the paper deals also with two further issues examined by the LIBE Study: the cooperation of service providers with law enforcement agencies and the in-ternational trade of hacking tools.

Intercettazione di comunicazioni telematiche e acquisizione di dati : sullo studio dell’Unione Europea su Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement / A. Bonfanti. - In: DIRITTI UMANI E DIRITTO INTERNAZIONALE. - ISSN 1971-7105. - 11:2(2017), pp. 506-515. [10.12829/87261]

Intercettazione di comunicazioni telematiche e acquisizione di dati : sullo studio dell’Unione Europea su Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement

A. Bonfanti
2017

Abstract

. Hacking by law enforcement agencies, in the light of privacy and personal data protection: remarks about the European Union Study on Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement Pursuant to the Study on Legal Frameworks for Hacking by Law Enforcement, commissioned by the European Parliament at the request of the LIBE Committee and published in March 2017, the current is the ‘golden age of surveillance’. Thanks to the hacking tools, law enforcement agencies can acquire more personal data than they could ever previously. Considered that hacking practices can negatively affect the enjoyment of the right to privacy and personal data protection, the paper examines the LIBE Study, focusing on the requirements that domestic legislations in this field should comply with pursuant to the jurisprudence developed by the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice. In this context, the paper deals also with two further issues examined by the LIBE Study: the cooperation of service providers with law enforcement agencies and the in-ternational trade of hacking tools.
cyber-surveillance; cyber-security; privacy; data protection; international trade; service providers
Settore IUS/13 - Diritto Internazionale
2017
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/562436
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