Government Access to Personal Data and Transnational Interoperability: An Accountability Perspective
In a new article published in the Oslo Law Review, Christopher Docksey and Kenneth Propp argue that the principle of “accountability” currently utilized for ensuring the privacy of personal data in the commercial context is equally a valuable framework for regulating government access to data.
In the Shadow of the European Court of Justice: The Luxembourg Conference on Transatlantic Data Transfers
In a recent article in the European Law Blog, Ken Propp discusses the legal and judicial landscape evolving in response to the conclusion of the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework (DPF).
LAWFARE – Revenge or Reciprocity: The U.S.’ review of Europe’s Sigint Safeguards
From being judged to judging, the U.S.’s review of European signals intelligence collection could encourage rule-of-law coherence.
Why sharing passenger data doesn’t fly for the EU’s top court
Kenneth Propp discusses potential compatibility issues surrounding post-9/11 airline passenger name records (PNR) analysis with the data and privacy rights currently in focus at Europe’s top court.