Shubh Gupta,

Reeta Sony A .L.

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №2, P. 70 - 81

Published: July 27, 2021

The dawn of the neocolonial project has seen the emergence of a new space: data. Data is a raw material that can be stitched, processed and marketed in the same way as the East India Company (EIC) used to do with India’s cotton. EIC, which started as one of the world’s first joint-stock companies, turned into a wild beast, building a corporate lobby with the help of lawyers and MP shareholders to amend legislation in its favor. The EIC became a particularly atrocious and innovative colonial project that directly or indirectly controlled continents, thanks to an army larger than the …

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Luidmila Terentieva

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №2, P. 49 - 69

Published: July 27, 2021

The author examines a special approach to establishing the sovereignty of the state in relation to cyberspace, the extraterritorial characteristics of which determine the question of the implementation of the territorial supremacy of the state. The author concludes that the understanding of the state’s sovereignty in relation to cyberspace lies not in detailing a set of measures in the form of sovereign powers undertaken in this area, but in constructing the boundaries of cyberspace both in relation to the technical component of the network infrastructure that supports the smooth functioning of the Network, and in in relation to the virtual …

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Anzhelika Izotova

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №1, P. 160 - 168

Published: May 4, 2021

Analysis of ways of limiting secrecy of correspondence in Russian judicial practice

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Yuriy Truntsevsky,

Vyacheslav Sevalnev

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №1, P. 100 - 122

Published: May 4, 2021

The purpose of the present article is to gain an understanding of the opportunities and difficulties created by the introduction and development of the practice of network (smart) contracts. Our research methodology is based on a holistic set of principles and methods of scholarly analysis employed by modern legal science. It uses a dialectical method involving both general approaches (structural system method, formal logical method, analysis and synthesis of individual elements, individual features of concepts, abstraction, generalization, etc.) and particular methods (legal technical, systematic, comparative, historical, and grammatical methods, method of the unity of theory and practice, etc.). We analyze …

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Vitaly Kalyatin

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №1, P. 42 - 63

Published: May 4, 2021

The broad use of artificial intelligence in creating intellectual works poses difficulties for legislators and courts in choosing the proper legal framework for such works and defining the place of artificial intelligence in the legal system as a whole. In this article, we shall study different models of regulating such issues and analyze the prospects and consequences of their use. We show that only a few of many different models for copyrighting AI-generated works are viable and that the most promising among them is the introduction of a special limited related right for the person who organizes the use of …

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Elvira Talapina

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: №1, P. 3 - 16

Published: May 4, 2021

Digitalization has become omnipresent today. No longer limited to the security sphere, digital technologies are actively transforming society as a whole. However, the conservative institution of law does not always respond promptly to changes, and many lawyers believe that the traditional legislation in force is sufficient to handle this new object of regulation. Yet the fact is that this object cannot be called traditional from the regulatory standpoint. Technology has a powerful impact on both law and the state and so requires new solutions. Under such circumstances, it is important to gain a legal understanding of digitalization without delay. The …

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Stefano Dorigo,

Stefano Pietropaoli,

Ettore M. Lombardi,

Erik Longo

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: №2, P. 3 - 34

Published: Dec. 17, 2020

We are experiencing a digital revolution that is changing the very nature of law. Digital code becomes a form of regulation through which private actors link their values to technological artifacts that prove capable of conditioning their operations both on a material and moral level. But technological artifacts appear to be non-neutral means, reflecting choices of different nature, among which those of a political nature stand out. The more the regulatory provisions are implemented through the use of technologies, the more the codes acquire the status of a regulatory technique, which can be used both to define and incorporate regulatory …

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Aleksei Gudkov

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: №3, P. 59 - 77

Published: Dec. 17, 2020

Internet technology makes digital value transactions between anonymous individuals possible, but leaves unanswered the question of how to resolve disputes between unidentified parties. Blockchain dispute resolution platforms provide a response to this problem. In the social dispute resolution systems for blockchain currently in use, pseudo anonymous jurors can resolve disputes between pseudo anonymous parties. This paper presents Kleros as the most illustrative blockchain dispute resolution platform BDRP. To describe the features of the Kleros dispute resolution platform and the qualification of jurors, this research employs an online dispute resolution survey of both the jurors and stakeholders of the Kleros platform. …

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Aleksander N. Kozyrin

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: №2, P. 144 - 162

Published: Nov. 4, 2020

The rapid development of information technologies and digitalization of the global economy is compelling the Russian customs service to quickly create an electronic customs system that can coexist alongside the traditional paper customs control. The creation of electronic customs aligns with the development strategies outlined in Presidential Decree No. 204 “On national goals and strategic development tasks of the Russian Federation through 2024” of 7 May 2018. Electronic customs contributes to the development of international cooperation, exports, and an attractive investment climate. The first results of electronic customs are impressive: more than a third of all customs declarations are registered …

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Nail Akhmetzakirov

Legal Issues in the Digital Age, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: №2, P. 173 - 177

Published: Nov. 4, 2020

Digitalizing the court activity in the Republic of Kazakhstan

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