Terms of Service and Human Rights: an Analysis of Online Platform Contracts

Venturini, J., Louzada, L., Maciel, M. F., Zingales, N., Stylianou, K. and Belli, L. (2016) Terms of Service and Human Rights: an Analysis of Online Platform Contracts. Editora Revan. ISBN 9788571065741

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Abstract

From the late 1990s to early 2000s, the Internet was considered as a tool able to directly connect users to providers, buyers to sellers, the public to authors, thereby eliminating a number of traditional intermediaries in a phenomenon identified then as 'disintermediation'. However, data traffic between senders and receivers in the Internet depends on the existence of a number of private agents in infrastructural, logic and content layers. Because of that, it seems more correct to state that the Internet does not determine disintermediation, but that it encourages the emergence of new intermediaries, which replace some of the agents who played essential roles before. It is possible to observe the emergence of a wide range of particularly powerful private entities with the ability to regulate the access and dissemination of information through private agreements, and to collect large amounts of personal information about users and their activities.

Item Type:Books
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Stylianou, Professor Konstantinos
Authors: Venturini, J., Louzada, L., Maciel, M. F., Zingales, N., Stylianou, K., and Belli, L.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > School of Law
Publisher:Editora Revan
ISBN:9788571065741

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