Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 340 | General Stack (For lending) | 343.0999 NOT-G (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 46930 |
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343.0721 MEA-M Competition is killing us : how big business is harming our society and planet - and what to do about it / | 343.0786606 CHA-R Cunning of rights : | 343.0954 VAR-T Psycon / | 343.0999 NOT-G Internet of things and the law : legal strategies for consumer-centric smart technologies / | 343.4104 BRO-R Great tax robbery : how britain became a tax haven for fat cats and big business / | 343.410999 LLO-I Information technology law / | 343.410999 LLO-I Information technology law / |
Internet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies is the most comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the legal issues in the Internet of Things (IoT). For decades, the decreasing importance of tangible wealth and power – and the increasing significance of their disembodied counterparts – has been the subject of much legal research. For some time now, legal scholars have grappled with how laws drafted for tangible property and predigital ‘offline’ technologies can cope with dematerialisation, digitalisation, and the internet. As dematerialisation continues, this book aims to illuminate the opposite movement: rematerialisation, namely, the return of data, knowledge, and power within a physical ‘smart’ world. This development frames the book’s central question: can the law steer rematerialisation in a human-centric and socially just direction? To answer it, the book focuses on the IoT, the sociotechnological phenomenon that is primarily responsible for this shift. After a thorough analysis of how existing laws can be interpreted to empower IoT end users, Noto La Diega leaves us with the fundamental question of what happens when the law fails us and concludes with a call for collective resistance against ‘smart’ capitalism.
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