Mass Data Surveillance and Predictive Policing

Mass Data Surveillance and Predictive Policing
Mass Data Surveillance and Predictive Policing critically assesses legal frameworks involving the bulk processing of personal data, initially collected by the private sector, to predict and prevent crime through advanced profiling technologies. In the EU, mass data surveillance currently engages three sectors: electronic communications (under the e-Privacy Directive), air travelling (under the Passenger Name Records Directive) and finance (under the Anti-Money Laundering Directive), and increasingly intersects with the deployment of predictive policing techniques. The book questions the legitimacy and impact of these frameworks in light of the EU’s powers to provide security while safeguarding fundamental rights, particularly privacy, data protection, effective remedy, fair trial and presumption of innocence.
Teresa Baker
0
3/28/2025
01:14:42
IIPP, Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, Plixavra Vogiatzoglou, Amsterdam Center for International Law, Institute for Information Law, University of Amsterdam, Matthew Cole, University of Sussex, Cecilia Rikap, economics, Data Science, Security, surveillance, Crime
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