Full Description
Ambient intelligence and the profiling activities authorized by modern technologies oblige us to renew our legislation in different directions. Traditionally, data protection law considers only the relationship between data controllers and data subjects positioned as independent entities. However, in the ambient intelligence reality where profiling activities proliferate, enabled by more and more sophisticated software algorithms, their societal impacts have to be taken into consideration by legislative bodies.
Contents
1) Privacy and data protection-history and current state of law;
2) European Union Competence in the field of Asylum and Migration Policy;
3) Possible risks of fundamental rights infringements posed by the digitalization of the EU immigration and asylum policy;
4) Between Knowledge and Power- Use of Technology for the management of immigration policy: European Union versus United States of America
Final Remarks
References