24 June 2016

The Future of UK Data Protection Laws after Brexit: Some Initial Thoughts

As UK (and the rest of the world) reels from the results of the UK referendum and we find ourselves living in a world where the dystopian Faragist (yes I know he is not the only one!) rhetoric reflects the current thinking of many in the UK, we face important and serious questions about our future laws, policies, social norms and the like in the UK.

For many UK data protection lawyers, the challenge ahead is to ensure that we remain important and relevant voices both with the context of the implementation, interpretation and enforcement of the General Data Protection Regulation and the reform of UK data protection laws.

Since the Brexit outcome, the  UK ICO has said that the UK will rely on "adequacy" decisions from the press release it seems to be more than the usual "essential adequacy". But this could just be down to poor drafting!



However, I doubt this will be effective given that adequacy decisions and similar mechanisms are under attack at EU level. Only BCRs  are not under attack although who knows for how long? And BCRs are not appropriate in all cases. Since the UK ICO release, Jan Phillip Albrecht has since noted on Twitter that the an "adequacy decision" may not be sufficient given surveillance concerns. The UK will need to develop and implement effective data transfer mechanisms, which are line with the robust requirements of the GDPR and protect the fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals. UK data protection lawyers will play key roles in ensuring that we have the relevant data transfer mechanisms in place which will support UK/EU data transfers, promote the growth of the data-driven economy and protect the fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals. 

This also bring us to the second task at hand for UK data protection lawyers. How will the UK amend its data protection laws in the aftermath of Brexit? Will the principles of the European Convention of Human Rights still apply in the UK? If so, how will they be reflected in the new laws? What is the status of decades of European jurisprudence which have impacted on how we have interpreted our national data protection laws? To what extent will and should the new the UK data protection laws include provisions which reflect the new realities since Google Spain and Schrems cases (and others!) to enable UK/EU data transfers.

These are some of the inital questions which UK data protection lawyers and policy- makers need to address once we have all recovered from the shock of Brexit. Anya Croops QC of 11KBW has also published interesting insights on the upcoming data protection challenges in the UK.

We need to ensure that the data-driven economy and digital innovation in the UK does not suffer because UK data protection laws cut us off from the rest of the world. This is not a small task and we all need to put our thinking hats on...fast!

7 April 2016

Data Privacy Regulation in the Context of Facebook Advertisements

The blog of the Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law recently covered my upcoming article in the John Marshall Journal of Information Technology & Privacy Law on data privacy regulation in the context of Facebook advertisements.

You can read more about it here.

Smart Regulation and the General Data Protection Regulation

I recently published an article on smart regulation and the General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR") on the website of the Society of Computers and Law.  The article will also feature in the next issue of Computers & Law. You can read the full text of the article below.

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Data protection and privacy practitioners are waiting anxiously for the official adoption of the GDPR. The latest indication from the European Commission is that the GDPR will officially be adopted in June/July 2016 and in force as from June/July 2018.

Since political agreement was reached on the GDPR in December 2015, we have a fairly good idea of some of the main aspects of the official legislation, such as the statutory recognition of an 'accountability' principle, a risk-based approach to data protection (eg data protection/privacy impact assessments, privacy by design, breach notification), and enhanced individual rights (eg new right of data portability and right to be forgotten). 

Once the GDPR is in force, the litmus test for success will be the consistent implementation, interpretation and enforcement of the Regulation. Many commentators have already warned that the GDPR's promise of harmonization may be more fiction than fact due to the vague and ambiguous provisions of the GDPR (eg legitimate interests provision) as well as the so-called 'open clauses'. 'Open clauses' refer to GDPR provisions where implementation is left to the member-states.
But looking beyond the immediate parapet of the rules, the GDPR is also heralding a move to smart regulation. One aspect of smart regulation is that it involves interactions between diverse stakeholders, such as law-makers, EU DPAs, European Data Protection Board, European Commission, data controllers, data processors, and quasi-regulators (eg third-party certification bodies). Some of these stakeholders, such as EU DPAs and the companies they regulate, used to interact with one another in the pre-GDPR era. However, a move towards smart regulation can often impact on these existing relationships. 

In this article, I explore what smart regulation may mean for the relationships between EU DPAs and the companies they regulate. I draw on some of the findings of my recent empirical research project, where I have analysed how some EU DPAs are starting to embrace smart regulation during their investigations of multinational cloud providers, to suggest four potential key aspects of a smart regulatory relationship between EU DPAs and their regulatees. These four points are mere starting points when reflecting on what smart regulation may look like for the relationships between EU DPAs and the companies they oversee. As noted below, much more work needs to be done to flesh out how such relationships will be developed in practice. 

Active Engagement between EU DPAs and Companies
Companies and EU DPAs will benefit from active, regular, and informal engagement with each other from the very beginning and in any event before a data breach is detected or reported. Opening the dialogue between the regulator and regulatees from an early stage has three key advantages. Firstly, it will enable both parties to build a productive rapport which will be crucial in many cases where there will be a long-term relationship between the regulator and the company. This will, in all likelihood, be the case for multinational companies with a strong European presence and the EU DPAs which will be their lead regulator for their EU operations.  

Secondly, this type of interaction will make it possible for EU DPAs to gain an in-depth knowledge of the processing operations and policies of the companies which fall within their jurisdiction, long before any data breach has been reported. 

Finally, this will provide companies with the opportunity to explain to the regulators their offerings, business drivers, and processing operations. Such engagement means that the regulator will have a detailed understanding of the organisation which can often be useful during enforcement. 

 Organisations can also discuss with EU DPAs the data protection and privacy issues which are potentially raised by their future products or services and tackle such issues head on at the ideation or preliminary design stage rather than after these products or services have been launched. This approach can often not only be cost-effective but also enable companies, especially multinationals, to reduce or avoid negative media coverage which plays a pivotal role in determining the reputation of such organisations. 

This level of engagement between EU DPAs and companies will be problematic if EU DPAs do not develop effective and consistent strategies which will enable them to prioritise tasks in an informed and systematic way. This will be even more crucial for EU DPAs which have limited resources. Unfortunately, the GDPR is silent on how EU DPAs can assess the priority of their activities.  Consequently, one of the tasks ahead before the GDRP is in force will be to formulate consistent guidelines which EU DPAs can use to evaluate which regulatory activity takes precedence over others. 

Compliance Attitudes of Companies
EU DPAs will need to recognize that companies will have different, and often complex, attitudes to compliance. Some organisations may be largely co-operative whilst others may often be recalcitrant. Additionally, the compliance attitudes of companies are likely to change over time for various reasons, including media coverage, reputation, change in management and so on. At times, an otherwise co-operative company can start to object to some of the data protection recommendations which an EU DPA may make. Consequently, EU DPAs need to learn how to deal with and manage the intricate and rapidly evolving compliance attitudes of the organisations they oversee.
Additionally, EU DPAs may often benefit from identifying the reasons why companies may wish to comply with the law. EU DPAs can then often use these reasons as bargaining chips during their interactions with these organisations in order to secure the desired data protection outcome. In many cases, compliance can often be driven by many (rather than one), often interconnected, reasons, such as avoiding reputational damage, generating the trust of customers in the company, avoiding citable binding court decisions, and moral reasons. 

Dynamic Regulatory Styles
EU DPAs may benefit from developing dynamic regulatory styles so that they can respond effectively to the diverse and often shifting compliance attitudes of their regulatees. In particular, in some cases it may be appropriate for EU DPAs to adopt regulatory styles which gradually escalate from soft strategies (eg persuasion, discussion) to harder strategies where the regulatee objects to base line compliance (eg threat to initiate enforcement action) to soft strategies again once the organisation co-operates. 

My recent study highlighted that regulatory styles which can seamlessly move from one end of the spectrum (soft) to the other (hard) and back are often the most effective ones. Additionally, my research also showed that EU DPAs which adopted a 'smarter' approach to regulation by (i) adopting not only dynamic regulatory styles but also recognising the business drivers of companies, (ii) attempting to find mutually convenient solutions, and (iii) not relying heavily on formalistic tools often achieved better outcomes in the longer term. 

This shift in the regulatory styles of EU DPAs will be one of the key challenges ahead when tackling smart regulation. Some EU DPAs may be bound by procedural rules which may prevent them from smoothly moving from soft to hard to soft regulatory styles. Other EU DPAs may need to learn how to regulate in this manner whilst being effective. Thus, we need to bear these points in mind when thinking about how to develop smart regulation when the GDPR is in force. 

Regulatory Relationship Management
Smart regulation also means that companies need to rethink how they approach and manage their relationships with the EU DPAs. In the pre-GDPR era, the regulatory relationship often started on an ex-post basis, for example, when a data breach was detected or when an individual filed a complaint against the company. In many cases, the regulatory relationship would often start on negative note with many companies being on the defensive from the start. 

In the GDPR era, the relationships between many companies (let's say multinationals) and their regulators, especially their lead EU DPAs, may often be from cradle to grave. Such relationships may often start on an ex-ante basis, for example, when a multinational opens a local branch in the territory of the EU DPA. 

In order to develop healthy and productive regulatory relationships, many organisations will have to change how they conceive and manage these relationships. We may need to look at how regulatory relationships in other industries are successfully built in order to learn how companies can build effective and long-term relationships with EU DPAs.

For example, showing the regulators that you want to co-operate (and mean it!), knowing how to negotiate compliance effectively so as to promote innovation whilst complying with the law, keeping the promises made to the regulators may be fruitful ways in which companies can start creating a positive dialogue with their regulators. We also need to consider how SMEs and other companies with a limited budget can cultivate this type of regulatory relationship despite their limited resources.  

Dr Asma Vranaki is an Associate Fellow at the University of Oxford where she investigates the regulation of computer-mediated communication technologies (eg cloud computing, social media). She is a non-practising barrister who specialises in the data protection and privacy law issues raised by the Digital Age.
 
For more see, Vranaki, Asma A.I., 'Cloud Investigations by European Data Protection Authorities: An Empirical Account,' in Rothchild John A (ed), Research Handbook on Electronic Commerce Law (Edward Elgar, Forthcoming); Queen Mary School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 195/2015 < http://ssrn.com/abstract=2602216>. The author conducted this research whilst working on the EC-funded 'Accountability for Cloud' research project.

25 January 2016

How are you celebrating Data Protection Day?

As we are celebrating Data Protection Day later this week and have a number of data protection events ( CPDP conference I am talking about you!), and are entering the final week of negotiations for the so-called Safe Harbour 2.0, I thought that this is an opportune time for me to devote some time to blogging.

Post-doctoral research, writing some articles, re-writing other articles, and teaching law (to name but a few!) got the best of me for most of 2015 and blogging was relegated to the 'tomorrow to-do list' which never seemed to have been tackled!

So to celebrate DPD, I am pledging to blog more this year about law, technology and of course data protection! It`s out there now so I can not backtrack!!

 How will YOU be celebrating DPD? I would love to hear your plans via comment or on twitter!! Needless to say for me, this week will be full of data protection blogging, commenting on some of the CPDP sessions , and the Schrems/Wire debate!

26 May 2015

Our open letter to the House of Commons on the importance of respecting the democratic process as UK surveillance laws are being revised



Dear Readers,

As many of you are aware, following vairous media outlets` coverage, today we have sent an open letter to all members of the House of Commons on the importance of respecting the democratic process as UK surveillance laws are being revised.

You can find a copy of the full letter below.

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An open letter to all members of the House of Commons,

Dear Parliamentarian,

Ensuring the Rule of Law and the democratic process is respected as UK surveillance law is revised

Actions Taken Under the Previous Government

During the past two years, the United Kingdom’s surveillance laws and policies have come under scrutiny as the increasingly expansive and intrusive powers of the state have been revealed and questioned in the media. Such introspection is healthy for any democracy. However, despite a need for transparency in all areas of lawmaking, and in particular in areas of controversy, the previous Government repeatedly resisted calls for an open and transparent assessment and critique of UK surveillance powers. Instead, in response to legal challenges, it extended the powers of the state in the guise of draft Codes of Practice and “clarifying amendments.” As we welcome a new Government we expect another round of revisions to UK surveillance laws, with the likelihood that the Queen’s Speech will signal a revival of the Communications Data Bill. At this time we call on the new Government, and the members of the House, to ensure that any changes in the law, and especially any expansions of power, are fully and transparently vetted by Parliament, and open to consultation from the public and all relevant stakeholders.

Last year, in response to the introduction of the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Bill (“DRIP”), a number of leading academics in the field – including many of the signatories to this letter – called for full and proper parliamentary scrutiny of the Bill to ensure Parliamentarians were not misled as to what powers it truly contained. Our concern emanated from the Home Secretary’s attempt to characterise the Bill, which substantially expanded investigatory powers, as merely a re-affirmation of the pre-existing data retention regime.[1]

Since that letter was written, it has become apparent that the introduction of the DRIP Bill was not the only time an expansion of surveillance powers was presented in a way seemingly designed to stifle robust democratic consideration. In February 2015, the Home Office published the draft Equipment Interference Code of Practice.[2] The draft Code was the first time the intelligence services openly sought specific authorisation to hack computers both within and outside the UK. Hacking is a much more intrusive form of surveillance than any previously authorised by Parliament. It also threatens the security of all internet services as the tools intelligence services use to hack can create or maintain security vulnerabilities that may be used by criminals to commit criminal acts and other governments to invade our privacy. The Government, though, sought to authorise its hacking, not through primary legislation and full Parliamentary consideration, but via a Code of Practice.

The previous Government also introduced an amendment via the Serious Crimes Act 2015, described in the explanatory notes to the Bill as a ‘clarifying amendment’.[3] The amendment effectively exempts the police and intelligence services from criminal liability for hacking. This has had an immediate impact on the ongoing litigation of several organisations who are suing the Government based in part on the law amended, the Computer Misuse Act 1990.[4]

The Way Ahead

The new Conservative Government has announced its intention to propose new surveillance powers through a resurrection of the Communications Data Bill. This will require internet and mobile phone companies to keep records of customers’ browsing activity, social media use, emails, voice calls, online gaming and text messages for a year, and to make that information available to the government and security services. We also anticipate this Parliament will see a review of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, which currently regulates much of the Government’s surveillance powers. The Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, David Anderson QC, has conducted an independent review of the operation and regulation of investigatory powers, with specific reference to the interception of communications and communications data. The report of that review has been submitted to the Prime Minister, but has yet to be made public: when it is made public, parliamentary scrutiny of the report and any recommendations made following it will be essential.

As the law requires that surveillance powers must be employed proportionate to any harm to privacy caused (as required by Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) we believe that any expansion or change to the UK’s surveillance powers should be proposed in primary legislation and clearly and accurately described in the explanatory notes of any Bill. The Bill and its consequences must then be fully and frankly debated in Parliament. When reaching an assessment of the proportionality, of any measure that restricts rights, both our domestic courts and the European Court of Human Rights place great stock on the degree and quality of Parliamentary involvement prior to any measure being adopted. If the matter ever came to before the courts one issue examined would be the nature of any “exacting review” undertaken by MPs into the necessity of extending these powers. The Government should not be permitted to surreptitiously change the law whenever it so desires, especially where such changes put our privacy and security at risk.

This letter has been prepared and signed by 38 academic researchers. We are comprised of people from both sides of this issue - those who believe that increased powers are a reasonable response to an emerging threat, and those who think them an unjustified extension of state interference. Our common goal is to see the Rule of Law applied and Parliamentary oversight reasserted. We are calling on all members of the House of Commons, new and returning, and of all political persuasions to support us in this by ensuring Parliamentary scrutiny is applied to all developments in UK surveillance laws and powers as proposed by the current Government.  

Signatories

Andrew Murray (contact signatory)
Paul Bernal (contact signatory)
Professor of Law
London School of Economics
Lecturer in Information Technology, Intellectual Property and Media Law University of East Anglia

Anne Barron
Associate Professor of Law
London School of Economics

Subhajit Basu
Associate Professor of Law
University of Leeds

Sally Broughton Micova
Deputy Director LSE Media Policy Project, Department of Media and Communications
London School of Economics

Abbe E.L. Brown
Senior Lecturer
School of Law
University of Aberdeen

Ian Brown
Professor of Information Security and Privacy
Oxford Internet Institute
Ray Corrigan
Senior Lecturer in Maths, Computing and Technology
Open University

Angela Daly
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Swinburne Institute for Social Research
Swinburne University of Technology
Richard Danbury
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Faculty of Law
University of Cambridge

Catherine Easton
Lecturer in Law
Lancaster University School of Law

Lilian Edwards
Professor of E-Governance
Strathclyde University
Andres Guadamuz
Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property Law
University of Sussex

Edina Harbinja
Lecturer in Law
University of Hertfordshire

Julia Hörnle
Professor in Internet Law
Queen Mary University of London
Argyro P Karanasiou
Senior Lecturer in Law
Centre for Intellectual Property, Policy & Management (CIPPM)
Bournemouth University

Theodore Konstadinides
Senior Lecturer in Law
University of Surrey

Douwe Korff
Emeritus Professor of International Law
London Metropolitan University
Associate of the Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford

Mark Leiser
Postgraduate Researcher
Strathclyde University

Orla Lynskey
Assistant Professor of Law
London School of Economics

David Mead
Professor of UK Human Rights Law
UEA Law School
University of East Anglia

Robin Mansell
Professor, Department of Media and Communication
London School of Economics

Chris Marsden
Professor of Law
University of Sussex

Steve Peers
Professor of Law
University of Essex

Gavin Phillipson
Professor, Law School
University of Durham

Julia Powles
Researcher
Faculty of Law
University of Cambridge

Andrew Puddephatt
Executive Director
Global Partners Digital
Judith Rauhofer
Lecturer in IT Law
University of Edinburgh

Chris Reed
Professor of Electronic Commerce Law
Queen Mary University of London

Felipe Romero-Moreno
Lecturer in Law
University of Hertfordshire

Burkhard Schafer
Professor of Computational Legal Theory
University of Edinburgh

Joseph Savirimuthu
Senior Lecturer in Law
University of Liverpool

Andrew Scott
Associate Professor of Law
London School of Economics

Peter Sommer
Visiting Professor
Cyber Security Centre, De Montfort University

Gavin Sutter
Senior Lecturer in Media Law
Queen Mary University of London

Judith Townend
Director of the Centre for Law and Information Policy
Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
University of London

Asma Vranaki
Post-Doctoral Researcher in Cloud Computing
Queen Mary University of London
Lorna Woods
Professor of Law
University of Essex


14 May 2015

Dear Google: open letter from 80 academics on 'right to be forgotten'

Our open letter to Google published in today`s Guardian seeking the disclosure of compliance data in relation to its implementation of the right to be forgotten.

And Google`s response. Let`s see how this balancing exercise translates in practice and what concrete outputs are circulated. 


12 May 2015

Cloud Investigations by European Data Protection Authorities

You can find the recent draft of my book chapter entitled 'Cloud Investigations by European Data Protection Authorities: An Empirical View' on SSRN.

The full citation for the chapter is:

Vranaki, Asma A.I., Cloud Investigations by European Data Protection Authorities: An Empirical Account (March 31, 2015). Vranaki Asma, 'Cloud Investigations by European Data Protection Authorities: An Empirical Account,' in Rothchild John A (ed), Research Handbook on Electronic Commerce Law (Edward Elgar, 2016). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2602216

Let me know your thoughts!

30 March 2015

Cloud Investigations by EU Data Protection Authorities

I was delighted to present part of my current research on the cloud investigations conducted by European data protection authorities at the recent launch of the Centre for Law and Information Policy at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies.

My current research forms part of the 'Accountability for Cloud' research project which is a major European research project. I have designed and conducted a qualitative socio-legal research project which investigates how and why investigations of companies offering cloud computing technologies or services ('Cloud Providers') are being conducted by European data protection authorities. 

You can find a copy of my slides here.

9 January 2015

Programme for the Workshop entitled 'Balancing Business Innovation with Data Protection? Regulating the Digital Age' (University of Oxford)



Dear Readers

I am pleased to invite you to attend our forthcoming workshop entitled 'Balancing Business Innovation with Data Protection? Regulating the Digital Age' which will be held at the University of Oxford on 26 January 2015 at 14:00.  The workshop is organised by the Regulation Discussion Group of the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies of the University of Oxford.

Our detailed programme is pasted below.

If you wish to attend, please email me at asma.vranaki@qmul.ac.uk.

             


                                                                        

        Balancing Business Innovation with Data Protection?  Regulating the Digital Age

                                    First Technology Regulation Workshop
                          Haldane Room, Wolfson College, 26 January 2015

In recent years, there has been a rapid proliferation of a diverse range of information communication technologies, such as online social networking sites, cloud computing technologies, and, messaging applications. Hardly a day goes by without a new information communication technology being rolled out. As the world of Snapchat, Amazon Web Services, and the likes become firmly entrenched in modern society, new questions are being raised by regulators, scholars, and technologists about the risks such information communication technologies pose to the protection of ‘personal data.’ By ‘personal data’, we mean  any information which relates to an individual, who is or can be identified from the data, such as an individual’s internet protocol address, cookies, characteristics or  electronic mail address.  

The challenges which information communication technologies pose to the protection of personal data have been one of the major drivers for reforming the regulation of personal data, including the current reform of the EU data protection package.  How to strike a balance between the protection of personal data and the promotion of the European Union as a world leader in the digital economy is at the heart of the current European reform exercise. For example, the  recent ruling of the European Court of Justice in the Google Spain case has raised perplexing, pressing, and practical questions about how companies, such as Google, will deal with the additional regulatory burdens  which are now placed on them whilst continuing to drive innovation in the field of information communication technologies. Google reportedly received over 12,000 requests from individuals to remove information relating to them from the results of Google search engine within 24 hours of the Google Spain ruling.

This workshop will investigate whether it is possible for regulators and companies to strike a balance between business innovation and data protection in the Digital Age. This and many more questions will be explored during this workshop by academics, regulators, and practitioners from a range of disciplinary perspectives.

1.       What are the major patterns of data use in the digital advertising economy and what are the implications of these for regulation?

2.       In what ways can the so-called ‘co-regulation model’ empower and protect consumers?

3.       Is ‘co-regulation’ a viable option or will it lead to regulatory capture?

4.       Can privacy-enhancing technologies improve the accountability and transparency of companies’ practices in the context of self-regulation?


Programme
14:00 – 14:10
Opening remarks from the co-convenor of the Regulation Discussion Group
Dr Bettina Lange
Associate Professor in Law and Regulation
Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, University of Oxford

 

KEYNOTE SPEECH
14:10- 14:40
Transborder Data Flow in Competing Regulatory Frameworks: The EU Perspective
Dr Christopher Kuner
Associate Professor, University of Copenhagen

 

PANEL ONE   RETHINKING THE USE AND REGULATION OF PERSONAL
                                  DATA

14:40-15:40

Regulation by Privacy Seals and Certification
Steve Wood, Head of Policy Delivery
ICO

Review of the Practices of Self-Regulation in Digital Advertising in the UK: Innovation and Data Use
Nick Stringer, Director of Regulatory Affairs
UK Internet Advertising Bureau

Reflecting on the Distinction between Data Processors and Data Controllers: A View from Practice
Ronnie Preiskel, Partner
Preiskel & Co LLP

15:40 -16:00
Panel discussion

Moderator: Dr Bettina Lange

 


16:00 -16:20       Coffee break

PANEL TWO  CO-REGULATION AND SELF-REGULATION: BALANCING 
                                      INNOVATION AND DATA PROTECTION 
16:20 -17:20
Data Sovereignty, Data Flow, and International Jurisdiction in Cloud Computing
Christopher Millard, Professor of Privacy and Information Law
Queen Mary, University of London
Net Neutrality and Personal Data Protection: Towards a Co-regulatory Solution
Christopher T. Marsden, Professor of Internet and Media Law
University of Sussex

Cloud Computing: Technical Protections and Directions

Dr Jatinder Singh, Senior Research Associate
Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge



17:20-17:40

Panel discussion

Moderator: Dr Asma Vranaki, Post-Doctoral Researcher in Cloud Computing, Queen Mary, University of London
 

Drinks
 

Organising Committee
Dr Bettina Lange, Associate Professor in Law & Regulation (University of Oxford)
Dr Asma Vranaki, Post-Doctoral Researcher in Cloud Computing (QMUL)
Janet Hui Xue, PhD Candidate in Internet Regulation (Macquarie University)           

We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Macquarie University and the Oxford Regulation Discussion Group for this workshop.

For further details, please email Dr Asma Vranaki at asma.vranaki@qmul.ac.uk