1,721,007 research outputs found
La proposta di Regolamento sull'Intelligenza Artificiale: il modello Europeo basato sulla gestione del rischio
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Le règlement eIDAS: un cadre européen en matière d'identification électronique et services de confiance
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La valorizzazione delle opere d’arte on line e in particolare la diffusione on line di fotografie di opere d’arte. Profili giuridici
Valorization of artistic works on line is today the most innovative way of spreading culture. However, making information and in particular photos of artistic works available on-line may be in contrast with current legislation. In fact, information and photos are actually protected both by legislation on personal data and legislation on intellectual property. In this article limits provided by current Italian legislation are analyzed
A legal analysis of the use of blockchain technology for the formation of smart legal contracts
The object of the present work is to provide a legal analysis of the formation of legally binding agreements through blockchain-based smart contracts. Smart contracts are computer codes that are capable of running automatically upon the occurrence of specific conditions and according to pre-specified functions. These codes can be stored and processed on a blockchain and any change is recorded in the blockchain. The expression “smart legal contract” refers to the use of smart contracts in the contractual domain to perform already existing contracts or to express legally binding agreements in the form of lines of computer code. Regarding the latter, researchers question whether blockchain-based smart contracts can be considered legally binding contracts. The study aims at putting in correlation contract requirements with blockchain-
based smart contracts. The scope of the analysis is to verify how to interpret the rules on contract formation to make blockchain-based smart contracts fit into contract law
Norme sulle firme elettroniche a confronto: UE, Italia e Cina
Con il presente contributo si intende offrire una prospettiva comparata della normativa sulle firme elettroniche, ponendo a confronto la disciplina dettata dall’UNCITRAL, dal legislatore europeo e da quello italiano rispetto a quanto stabilito dalla normativa cinese.This contribution is intended to offer a comparative perspective of the legislation on electronic signatures, comparing the discipline dictated by UNCITRAL, the European and Italian legislators with respect to the provisions of Chinese legislation. Starting from the legislative genesis, the essential aspects of the normative texts are investigated, drawing the convergences and divergences between the two contexts: European and Chinese. Where all legislative texts share the cardinal principles and basic concepts, the differences can be wedged in the folds of the executive details. In examining the provisions of the legislation on electronic signatures from a comparative point of view, a differentiated panorama emerges also relating to the evolution of the judicial system. Finally, the common criticality of the legislative texts in question is highlighted: the risk of losing the sovereignty of the electronic signer. The technological substitute of handwritten signature seems inevitable in compliance with the cardinal principle of the free movement of goods
Major Legal Trends in the Digital Economy. The Approach of the EU, the US, and China
The book intends to observe and analyze the major trends in the digital economy at the international level, with particular attention to the rules applicable between Europe, the United States and China. After an initial overview of the current technological and geopolitical scenario, the first part of the volume deals with the matter of Governance of the Internet: in particular, it discusses the role played by law in the context of international e-commerce and which level of legislation (national or supranational) is best suited to regulate the commercial relationships arising from it. The first part of the book concludes with the identification of some regulatory and political objectives that it would be desirable for the rules on e-commerce to address, suggesting policies, especially on a cross-border level. The core part of the book makes an accurate comparison between the European, US and Chinese regulatory frameworks on e-commerce, electronic signatures, privacy and intellectual property, with particular attention to the recent Chinese discipline on e-commerce. The last part of the book is aimed at analyzing how the new challenges posed by the most recent developments in the field of information and technology are addressed in the international legal landscape, with specific reference to the problems (and opportunities) arising from the issues of digital identity, smart contracts, artificial intelligence and blockchain structures
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