Jump to content
Cross-Border Dissemination of Online Content / Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
Cross-Border Dissemination of Online Content / Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents
Chapter
Expand
|
Collapse
Page
1–18
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–18
Details
19–40
Executive Summary
19–40
Details
English Version
Details
Background of the Study
Details
Aim of the Study
Details
Fundamental Rights, Freedoms and Values
Details
Relevant EU Legislative Acts for Online Services
Details
Significance of the E-Commerce Directive and Challenges in Its Application
Details
Conclusions
Details
Deutsche Fassung
Details
Hintergrund der Studie
Details
Ziel der Studie
Details
Grundrechte, Grundfreiheiten und Werte
Details
Relevante Rechtsakte der EU für Online-Dienste
Details
Bedeutung der E-Commerce-Richtlinie und Herausforderungen bei ihrer Anwendung
Details
Schlussfolgerungen
Details
41–52
1. Background of the Study
41–52
Details
1.1. Online Dissemination of Content
Details
1.2. The Role of Platforms in the Online Dissemination of Content
Details
1.3. The Role of Supervisory Authorities in the Online Dissemination of Content
Details
1.4. The EU Digital Single Market Context
Details
1.5. Structure of the Study
Details
53–168
2. The Relevant EU Legal Framework for Online Content Dissemination
53–168
Details
2.1. Fundamental Rights
Details
2.1.1. Fundamental Rights Sources: EU Charter, European Convention on Human Rights and National Constitutional Law
Details
2.1.2. Relevant Fundamental Rights
Details
2.1.2.1. Human Dignity
Details
2.1.2.2. Rights of the Child and Protection of Minors
Details
2.1.2.3. Respect for Private and Family Life
Details
2.1.2.4. Freedom of Expression and the Media
Details
2.1.2.5. Freedom to Conduct a Business
Details
2.1.2.6. Right to Property
Details
2.1.3. Fundamental Rights Protection Obligations
Details
2.2. Fundamental Freedoms
Details
2.2.1. Freedom of Establishment and Freedom to Provide Services
Details
2.2.2. Free Movement of Goods
Details
2.3. Other Elements of EU Primary Law
Details
2.3.1. Fundamental Principles and Goals of the EU
Details
2.3.2. Relevant EU Competencies
Details
2.3.2.1. Legal Bases for an EU Competence in the Media Sector
Details
2.3.2.2. The Specific Legal Bases for the ECD
Details
2.4. EU Secondary Law
Details
2.4.1. e-Commerce Directive
Details
2.4.1.1. Historical Background
Details
2.4.1.2. Further Developments
Details
2.4.1.3. Main Goals and Principles of the Original ECD
Details
2.4.2. Audiovisual Media Services Directive
Details
2.4.2.1. Historical Development up to the Latest Revision in 2018
Details
2.4.2.2. Overview of Relevant Rules for the Online Context
Details
2.4.2.2.1. Personal Scope of Application
Details
2.4.2.2.2. Country-of-Origin Principle
Details
2.4.2.2.2.1. Importance of the Principle and Changes Related to It in the Recent Reform
Details
2.4.2.2.2.2. Home State Jurisdiction Rule
Details
2.4.2.2.2.3. Exceptional Derogation of Free Flow of Information
Details
2.4.2.2.2.4. Exception in Case of Circumvention
Details
2.4.2.2.3. Minimum Harmonisation Concerning Specific Types of Content
Details
2.4.2.2.4. Supervision and Sanctions
Details
2.4.3. Data Protection and ePrivacy
Details
2.4.3.1. Data Processing and the Media Privilege
Details
2.4.3.2. ePrivacy Directive and GDPR
Details
2.4.3.3. Market Location Principle
Details
2.4.3.4. Supervision and Sanctioning
Details
2.4.3.5. Jurisdiction and Cooperation of Authorities
Details
2.4.4. Intellectual Property Rules
Details
2.4.4.1. The InfoSoc and Enforcement Directives
Details
2.4.4.2. The DSM Directive
Details
2.4.5. Further Relevant Legislative Acts
Details
2.4.5.1. Platform-to-Business Regulation
Details
2.4.5.2. Proposal for a Regulation on Preventing the Dissemination of Terrorist Content Online
Details
2.5. EU Support, Coordination and Supplementary Measures
Details
2.5.1. The Recommendations on the Protection of Minors and Human Dignity
Details
2.5.2. The Actions Concerning the Tackling of Illegal Content Online
Details
2.5.3. The Actions Concerning the Tackling of Online Disinformation
Details
169–220
3. Detailed Analysis of the E-Commerce Directive
169–220
Details
3.1. Scope of Application
Details
3.1.1. Territorial Scope
Details
3.1.2. Functional Scope
Details
3.1.3. Personal Scope of Application
Details
3.2. The Country-of-Origin Principle
Details
3.2.1. Application
Details
3.2.2. Derogations
Details
3.2.3. Exemptions to the Scope of Application
Details
3.3. The Intermediary Liability Regime
Details
3.3.1. Historical Backdrop
Details
3.3.2. The Approach Chosen by the EU
Details
3.3.3. Categories of Specific Information Society Service Providers
Details
3.3.4. The Three Types of Specific Intermediary Service Activities
Details
3.3.4.1. “Mere Conduits” According to Art. 12 ECD
Details
3.3.4.2. Caching According to Art. 13 ECD
Details
3.3.4.3. Hosting According to Art. 14 ECD
Details
3.3.4.4. No General Monitoring Obligations According to Art. 15 ECD
Details
3.3.5. Delineation between National and EU Responsibilities
Details
3.3.6. Illegal Content – Challenges to EU Intermediary Liability Exemptions
Details
3.3.7. EU Intermediary Liability Framework – How the CJEU Has Dealt with the Challenges
Details
3.3.7.1. Challenge : The Question of Neutrality of Hosts
Details
3.3.7.2. Challenge 2: Actual Knowledge
Details
3.3.7.3. Challenge 3: Preventive Injunctions and Duties of Care
Details
3.3.7.3.1. L’Oréal v Ebay (C-324/09)
Details
3.3.7.3.2. Scarlet Extended (C-70/10) & Netlog (C-360/10)
Details
3.3.7.3.3. McFadden (C-484/14)
Details
3.3.7.3.4. Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek v Facebook Ireland (C-18/18)
Details
3.3.7.4. Other Intermediary-Related Case Law
Details
3.3.8. Defining a “Duty-of-Care” Standard
Details
3.3.8.1. The Reasoning behind New Responsibilities for Internet Intermediaries
Details
3.3.8.2. Proposals for a “Duty of Care”-Approach
Details
3.3.8.3. Illegal Content, Technical Standards and the New Approach
Details
3.3.8.4. Duty of Care for Internet Intermediaries in the EU Framework
Details
3.3.9. Intermediary Liability Provisions in Sectoral Legislation
Details
3.3.9.1. Sectoral Provisions in Digital Single Market Acts
Details
3.3.9.1.1. Audiovisual Media Services Directive
Details
3.3.9.1.2. DSM Directive
Details
3.3.9.2. Other Rules Complementing the ECD Liability Provisions
Details
3.3.9.2.1. InfoSoc and Enforcement Directive
Details
3.3.9.2.2. 2016 Guidance Note to the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive
Details
3.3.9.2.3. Regulation on Market Surveillance and Compliance of Products
Details
3.3.9.2.4. Directive on Combating Terrorism
Details
3.3.9.2.5. Proposal for a Regulation on Preventing the Dissemination of Terrorist Content Online
Details
3.3.9.2.6. General Data Protection Regulation
Details
3.3.9.2.7. Platform-to-Business Regulation
Details
221–264
4. Towards a Future Regulatory Framework for Online Content
221–264
Details
4.1. Lessons Learnt
Details
4.1.1. Difficulties in the Application of the ECD
Details
4.1.2. New Actors, New Approaches and New Regulatory Models
Details
4.1.3. Margin for Member States in Implementation: the Example of GDPR
Details
4.1.4. Institutional Dimension of Enforcement on National and EU level: the Example of the GDPR
Details
4.1.4.1. The European Data Protection Board Compared to Other Sectors
Details
4.1.4.2. Essential Factors for Institutional Organisation
Details
4.1.4.3. The Setup between National DPAs and Their Cooperation on EU Level
Details
4.1.5. Application to the ECD of Interim Findings Relating to the GDPR to the ECD
Details
4.2. Important Considerations
Details
4.2.1. Value-based Approach Necessitates Effective Enforcement
Details
4.2.2. Involvement of Industry through Self- and Co-regulatory Measures
Details
4.2.2.1. Defining Self- and Co-regulation
Details
4.2.2.2. Advantages and Disadvantages of Self- and Co-regulation
Details
4.2.2.3. Existing Forms of Self- and Co-regulation in the Online Environment
Details
4.2.2.4. Possible Forms and Conditions of Co-regulation on EU Level
Details
4.2.3. The Principle of Proportionality
Details
4.3. Possible Avenues
Details
4.3.1. General Considerations
Details
4.3.2. Adjusting Country-of-Origin and Market Location Principle
Details
4.3.3. Institutional Setup and Cooperation in Enforcement
Details
4.3.4. Improving Conditions for Enforcement
Details
4.4. Looking Ahead
Details
265–280
5. Bibliography
265–280
Details
281–280
Annex
281–280
Details
I. EU Primary Law und Fundamental Rights and Freedoms
Details
II. EU Secondary Law (in force and proposed)
Details
A. e-Commerce Directive
Details
B. Audiovisual Media Services Directive
Details
C. General Data Protection Regulation
Details
D. DSM Directive
Details
E. P2B-Regulation
Details
F. TERREG Proposal
Details
III. Recommendations on EU Level
Details
A. 2006 Recommendation on the Protection of Minors and Human Dignity
Details
B. Recommendation on Tackling Illegal Content Online
Details
Durchsuchen Sie das Werk
Geben Sie ein Keyword in die Suchleiste ein
CC-BY-NC-ND
Access
Cross-Border Dissemination of Online Content , page 1 - 18
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
Autoren
Mark D. Cole
Christina Etteldorf
Carsten Ullrich
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783748906438-1
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-6501-0
ISBN online: 978-3-7489-0643-8
Chapter Preview
Chapter Preview
Share
Download PDF
Download citation
RIS
BibTeX
Copy DOI link
doi.org/10.5771/9783748906438-1
Share by email
Video schließen
Share by email Nomos eLibrary
Recipient*
Sender*
Message*
Your name
Send message
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Service
apply.