Conţinutul numărului revistei |
Articolul precedent |
Articolul urmator |
855 6 |
Ultima descărcare din IBN: 2023-03-14 13:22 |
Căutarea după subiecte similare conform CZU |
342.41:341.171(4) (4) |
Constituții. Adunări legislative (239) |
Dreptul organizațiilor internaționale (273) |
SM ISO690:2012 KOLODZIEJCZYK, Marta. Right to be forgotten as one of key principles of the EU. Data Protection Law Reform. In: Revista Moldovenească de Drept Internaţional şi Relaţii Internaţionale, 2017, nr. 1(12), pp. 19-29. ISSN 1857-1999. |
EXPORT metadate: Google Scholar Crossref CERIF DataCite Dublin Core |
Revista Moldovenească de Drept Internaţional şi Relaţii Internaţionale | ||||||
Numărul 1(12) / 2017 / ISSN 1857-1999 /ISSNe 2345-1963 | ||||||
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CZU: 342.41:341.171(4) | ||||||
JEL: K33, K12, F53 | ||||||
Pag. 19-29 | ||||||
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Rezumat | ||||||
On 25 January 2012 the EC proposed a comprehensive reform of the EC's 1995 data protection rules. Although the core principles of the Directive 95/46 were still valid, it could no longer meet the challenges of rapid technological developments and globalization, and as a result required revision. One of those is the right to be forgotten already included in the Directive 95/46/EC that guarantees the individuals the right to request the controller to delete unlawfully processed personal data. However, due to the fact that according to the European Commission it is difficult to enforce this right in the online environment for an induvidual, some amendments to the current legilative framework were proposed. This article gives some insight into the EU data protection reform package highlighting a number of main changes in comparison to the current data protection rules, with the special focus given to the right to be forgotten. That is why the text is structured in the following way: 1) privacy and data protection — history and current state of law; 2) reinforcement of the rights of data subjects: a) enhancement of the responsibilities of controllers and processors; b) consent in the EU law; C) right to be forgotten; 5) right to access and right to data portability; 3) protection of personal data by police and criminal justice authorities. |
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Cuvinte-cheie data subject, data controller, data processor, fundamental rights, right to be forgotten |
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