Surveillance and Censorship: The Impact of Technologies on Human Rights
As human lives transition online, so do human rights. The main challenge for the European Union and other actors is to transition all human rights to the digital sphere. This report argues that the human rights-based approach can be helpful in focusing discussions about security on individuals rather than states. It provides an overview of countries and companies that pose risks to human rights in the digital sphere. It lists the most relevant international laws and standards, technical standards, business guidelines, Internet principles and policy initiatives that have been crucial in transitioning the human rights regime to the digital sphere. It also analyses the impact of recent EU actions related to Internet and human rights issues. It concludes that different elements of EU strategic policy on human rights and digital policy need be better integrated and coordinated to ensure that technologies have a positive impact on human rights. The report concludes that EU should promote digital rights in national legislation of the third countries, but also in its own digital strategies.
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Externí autor
Ben WAGNER, Joanna BRONOWICKA, Cathleen BERGER and Thomas BEHRNDT (Centre for Internet and Human Rights, European University Viadrina, Germany)
O tomto dokumentu
Druh publikace
Klíčové slovo
- evropská organizace
- EVROPSKÁ UNIE
- exteritorialita
- informace a zpracování informací
- informatika
- informační společnost
- internet
- komunikace
- kontrola komunikace
- mezinárodní lidskoprávní právo
- MEZINÁRODNÍ ORGANIZACE
- mezinárodní právo
- mezinárodní role EU
- MEZINÁRODNÍ VZTAHY
- OBSE
- ochrana soukromí
- politika spolupráce
- práva a svobody
- PRÁVO
- Rada Evropy
- sociální práva
- struktura Společenství
- svoboda projevu
- svoboda shromažďování
- svoboda vyznání
- světové organizace
- třetí země
- vliv informačních technologií
- VZDĚLÁVÁNÍ A KOMUNIKACE
- Wassenaarské ujednání