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SUMMARY:Julia Hornle and Findlay Stark: Internet Jurisdiction\, Extraterri
 toriality and Law Enforcement: Unclaimed Territories in the Cloud - where 
 are the Limits to Internet Jurisdiction? - Professor Julia Hornle (QMUL) a
 nd Dr Finlay Stark (Cambridge Centre for Criminal Justice)
DTSTART:20160503T130000Z
DTEND:20160503T150000Z
UID:TALK66097@talks.cam.ac.uk
CONTACT:Professor John Naughton
DESCRIPTION:*Abstract*\n\nThe Internet is a technology that continues to t
 ransform society\, thereby inevitably shaping the extent to which the laws
  of countries can operate outside of their jurisdiction across the world. 
 While there are those who regard the extraterritorial application of some 
 laws positively as a mechanism for protecting the fundamental rights of in
 dividuals from threats outside the jurisdiction\, it can be also be viewed
  as an improper intrusion of foreign states on domestic interests. As exam
 ined in a previous Technology and Democracy Project seminar\, one such exa
 mple would be the 2015 landmark decision of the highest court in the EU wh
 ich clearly established that EU data protection law applies to US law gove
 rning State surveillance on the basis that the US must provide adequate pr
 otection for the processing of personal data that is transferred from the 
 EU to the US. \n\nHence\, the significant but also novel implications pose
 d to the rule of law\, due process and privacy by the increasing levels of
  data processing across national borders by governments and the private se
 ctor in the cloud of the Internet makes this area of great interest to the
  Technology and Democracy Project.\n\nTo address the challenges posed by t
 his increasingly important and complex legal area for technology and democ
 racy in the era of Big Data and the Internet of Things\, we have brought t
 ogether Professor of Internet Law Julia Hornle (QMUL) who will present on 
 this topic and Dr Findlay Stark (Cambridge University Lecturer in Criminal
  Law and Deputy Director\, Cambridge Centre for Criminal Justice)\, the se
 minar’s discussant and chair.\n
LOCATION:CRASSH\, Alison Richard Building\, West Road\, Cambridge
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