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"Anyone concerned with preserving privacy against technology's growing intrusiveness will find this book enlightening." --Publishers Weekly"Solove . . . truly understands the intersection of law and technology. This book is a fascinating journey into the almost surreal ways personal information is hoarded, used, and abused in the digital age." --The Wall Street Journal"Solove is one of the most energetic and creative scholars writing about privacy today." --Jeffrey Rosen, author of The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and Freedom in an Anxious Age"Powerful theme." --Privacy Journal"This is not…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Anyone concerned with preserving privacy against technology's growing intrusiveness will find this book enlightening." --Publishers Weekly"Solove . . . truly understands the intersection of law and technology. This book is a fascinating journey into the almost surreal ways personal information is hoarded, used, and abused in the digital age." --The Wall Street Journal"Solove is one of the most energetic and creative scholars writing about privacy today." --Jeffrey Rosen, author of The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and Freedom in an Anxious Age"Powerful theme." --Privacy Journal"This is not only a book you should read, but you should make sure your friends read it." --IEEE Review"Solove offers a book that is both comprehensive and easy to understand, discussing the changes that technology has brought to our concept of privacy. An excellent starting point for much needed discussion." --Law Technology News"An unusually perceptive discussion of one of the most vexing problems of the digital age--our loss of control over our personal information. It's a fascinating journey into the almost surreal ways personal information is hoarded, used, and abused in the digital age. I recommend his book highly." --Bruce Schneier"Solove drives his points home through considerable reconfiguration of the basic argument. Rather than casting blame or urging retreat to a precomputer database era, the solution is seen in informing individuals, challenging data collectors, and bringing the law up-to-date." --Choice"If you want to find out what a mess the law of privacy is, how it got that way, and whether there is hope for the future, then read this book." --Legal Times"Solove evaluates the shortcomings ofcurrent approaches to privacy as well as some useful a
Autorenporträt
Daniel J. Solove is Associate Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School. He is the co-author of Information Privacy Law.