Towards the regulation of textual dark patterns in the EU and US: the contribution of computational tools
Casciato, Adelaide (A.A. 2021/2022) Towards the regulation of textual dark patterns in the EU and US: the contribution of computational tools. Tesi di Laurea in Innovation law and regulation, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Fabiana Di Porto, pp. 178. [Single Cycle Master's Degree Thesis]
Full text for this thesis not available from the repository.
Abstract/Index
Dark patterns. Data as currency: the value of dark patterns. Dark patterns: definition. Dark patterns: evolution. Taxonomy of dark patterns. Influence on decision-making according to behavioural analysis. Regulation of dark patterns. Textual dark patterns. Cookies: nature and function. Confirmshaming: definition, structure and technical functioning. Trick questions: technical functioning, economic impact and legal challenges. Available regulations against dark patterns in the EU. The Italian discipline against dark patterns. EU discipline. Privacy and data protection (GDPR). Cookies and other tracking tools guidelines. Regulations against dark patterns in the US. FTC’s statement on dark patterns of 2021 and subsequent actions by national States. CCPA California of 2021. California privacy rights act (CPRA). Colorado privacy act (CPA). Virginia consumer data protection act (VCDPA). Final remarks on the above acts. FTC’S enforcement policy statement. The proposed algorithmic justice and online platform transparency act of 2022. The proposed American innovation and choice online act 2022. Two EU proposals: data services act and data act. The digital services act (DSA). The data act. Computational analysis. Definition of computational analysis and its tools. How computational analysis can support public authorities enforce anti-dark patterns regulation.
References
Bibliografia: pp. 171-177.
Thesis Type: | Single Cycle Master's Degree Thesis |
---|---|
Institution: | Luiss Guido Carli |
Degree Program: | Single Cycle Master's Degree Programs > Single Cycle Master's Degree Program in Law (LMG-01) |
Chair: | Innovation law and regulation |
Thesis Supervisor: | Di Porto, Fabiana |
Thesis Co-Supervisor: | D'Avack, Lorenzo |
Academic Year: | 2021/2022 |
Session: | Summer |
Deposited by: | Alessandro Perfetti |
Date Deposited: | 22 Dec 2022 09:28 |
Last Modified: | 22 Dec 2022 09:28 |
URI: | https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/34467 |
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