ABSTRACT
Borderless cloud computing technologies are exacerbating tensions between European and other existing regulatory models for data privacy. On the one hand, in the European Union (EU), a series of data localisation initiatives are emerging with the objective of preserving Europe’s digital sovereignty, guaranteeing the respect of EU fundamental rights and preventing foreign law enforcement and intelligence agencies from accessing personal data. On the other hand, foreign countries are unilaterally adopting legislation requiring national corporations to disclose data stored in Europe, in this way bypassing jurisdictional boundaries grounded on physical data location. The chapter investigates this twofold dynamic by focusing particularly on the current friction between the EU data protection approach and the data privacy model of the United States (US) in the field of cloud computing.
Edoardo Celeste and Federico Fabbrini, Competing Jurisdictions: Data Privacy Across the Borders in Lynn, Theo, Mooney, John G, van der Werff, Lisa and Fox, Grace (eds) Data Privacy and Trust in Cloud Computing, Palgrave Studies in Digital Business and Enabling Technologies (2020), pp 43-58.
First posted 2020-11-25 14:33:19
Leave a Reply