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Disclosure in Criminal Proceedings

Edited by: Paul Jarvis, Oliver Glasgow
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 P. M. Callow


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 Keith Pugsley, Ken Miles


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Litigating Corporate Surveillance: Privacy, Autonomy, Power, and Democracy in the Courtroom


ISBN13: 9781032537337
To be Published: September 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £39.99



This book interrogates the legality of corporate surveillance, offering a corrective approach to protecting privacy through litigation--not through legislation.

Explosive revelations, from the Snowden disclosures to the Cambridge Analytica scandal, have shown us that our daily lives are embedded in a network of pervasive, panoptic surveillance designed to manipulate. This corporate surveillance network has grown to encompass and absorb the basic digital substrate of our daily lives. Received wisdom, among commentators, the press, and even legal academia, is that this is all legal: corporate surveillance has flourished because there are no legal tools to reign in its pervasive and invasive practices. Analysing recent developments in data privacy law in light of ever-increasing data aggregation and cybersurveillance practices by corporations and governments, this book examines the pervasive, multimodal corporate surveillance practices that now permeate both our digital and offline lives, and offers a prescription for fighting back through the courts. Interweaving discussions of the statutory, common law, and constitutional frameworks that are currently being applied in legal challenges to these activities, this book considers current critiques of privacy law as conceptualized by both legal scholars and practitioners. Additionally, it makes suggestions for navigating the future of privacy rights in the face of our increasingly digitized lives.

This book will be of interest to researchers and practitioners in the field of corporate surveillance, digital law, and privacy law.

Subjects:
Courts and Procedure, Privacy and Confidentiality
Contents:
Introduction

Part I: Foundations of Commercial Surveillance Litigation
1. Privacy as Power Relation
2. The Snowden Revelations and Government Cybersurveillance
3. Cambridge Analytica and the Unmasking of the Corporate Panopticon

Part II: The Current Privacy Battlefield
4. Geolocation Tracking - An Exhaustive Chronicle of our Daily Lives
5. Biometric Information Collection - Through a Face Scanner Darkly
6. Internet Activity Tracking - Business as Usual or Egregious Violation of Social Norms?
7. Big Data, Data Brokers, and the Corporate Surveillance Cartel
8. Harm and Damages Theories

Part III: Critiques, Alternative Fronts, and Future
9. Privacy, Performance, and Power
10. International Privacy: The Fight for Digital Sovereignty
11. The Rise of Hipster Antitrust - A New Front in the Fight for Privacy
12. The Future of Privacy Law