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Not Hardcoding but Softcoding Privacy
Journal
Technology and Regulation
ISSN-Digital
2666-139X
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2021-05-06
Author(s)
Abstract (De)
The delegation of decisions to machines has revived the debate on whether and how technology should and can embed fundamental legal values within its design. While these debates have predominantly been occurring within the philosophical and legal communities, the computer science community has been eager to provide tools to overcome some challenges that arise from ‘hardwiring’ law into code. What emerged is the formation of different approaches to code that adapts to legal parameters. Within this article, we discuss the translational, system-related, and moral issues raised by implementing legal principles in software. While our findings focus on data protection law, they apply to the interlinking of code and law across legal domains. These issues point towards the need to rethink our current approach to design-oriented regulation and to prefer ‘soft’ implementations, where decision parameters are decoupled from program code and can be inspected and modified by users, over ‘hard’ approaches, where decisions are taken by opaque pieces of program code.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
262254