1. PRIVATE RIGHTS OF ACTION IN PRIVACY LAW.
- Author
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Scholz, Lauren Henry
- Subjects
Privacy, Right of -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Antitrust law -- Evaluation ,Searches and seizures -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Third parties (Law) -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Data security -- Management -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Computer services industry -- Ethical aspects -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Law enforcement -- Methods -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Evaluation ,Dignity -- Management -- Remedies -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Right of action -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Market power -- Management -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Antitrust issue ,Company business management ,Data security issue ,Computer services industry ,United States Constitution (U.S. Const. amend. 4) - Abstract
Table of Contents Introduction 1641 I. Comparing Private, Public, and Hybrid Enforcement of Privacy Law 1646 A. Public Enforcement Regimes 1648 B. Private Enforcement Regimes 1651 C. Hybrid Enforcement Regimes [...], Many privacy advocates assume that the key to providing individuals with more privacy protection is strengthening the government's power to directly sanction actors that hurt the privacy interests of citizens. This Article contests the conventional wisdom, arguing that private rights of action are essential for privacy regulation. First, I show how private rights of action make privacy law regimes more effective in general. Private rights of action are the most direct regulatory access point to the private sphere. They leverage private expertise and knowledge, create accountability through discovery, and have expressive value in creating privacy-protective norms. Then to illustrate the general principle, I provide examples of how private rights of action can improve privacy regulation in a suite of key modern privacy problems. We cannot afford to leave private rights of action out of privacy reform.
- Published
- 2022