This CONSENT project seeks to examine how consumer behaviour, and commercial practices are changing the role of consent in the processing of personal data. While consumer consent is a fundamental value on which the European market economy is based, the way consumer consent is obtained is questionable in popular user-generative/user-generated (UGC) online services (including sites like MySpace, YouTube and Facebook), whose commercial success depends to a large extent on the disclosure by their users of substantial amounts of personal data.
There is an urgent need to study and analyse the changes in consumption behaviour and consumer culture arising from the emergence of UGC online services and how contractual, commercial and technical practices and other factors affect consumer choice and attitudes toward personal privacy in the digital economy.
CONSENT's multidisciplinary team is carrying out a status quo analysis of commercial practices, legal position and consumer attitudes, identifying criteria for fairness and best practices, and then create a toolkit for policy makers and corporate counsel which will enable them to address problem identified in the analysis.
CONSENT will advance the knowledge base that underpins the formulation and implementation of policies and corporate procedures in the area of privacy and consumer protection with a view to informing policy-making in the European Union and to contribute to the development of European research communities in these areas.
Partners
- University of Central Lancashire, Centre of Law, Information & Converging Technologies (CLICT), UK
- University of Malta, Centre For Communication Technology (UM), Malta
- The Law Institute of the Copenhagen Business School (CBS), Denmark
- University of Leiden, E-Law (LEIDEN), Netherlands
- Westfälische Wilhelms - Universität Münster, Institute for Information, Telecommunication and Media Law (WWU), Germany
- Georg-August Universität Göttingen, Chair for Civil Law, Intellectual Property Law, Media Law and E-Commerce (UGOE), Germany
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University Hanover, Institute for Legal Informatics (LUH), Germany
- Babes-Bolyai University, Faculty of Law (BBU), Romania
- Asociatia pentru Tehnologie si Internet (APTI), Romania
- University of Groningen, Faculty of Law (RuG), Netherlands
- Masaryk University, IT Law Work Group, Faculty of Law (MU), Czech Republic
- Queen's University Belfast (QUB), UK
- Uniwersytet Wroclawski, Research Centre for Legal and Economic Issues of Electronic Communication, Faculty of Law, Administration and Economics (UWR), Poland
- Universidad de Leon, (LEON), Spain
- Consilio Nazionale delle Richerche (CNR), Italy
- Laboratorio di Scienza della Cittadinanza (LSC), Italy
- Universite Paris-Sud XI, Institute of Space and Telecommunications Law (ISTL), France
- Univerzita Komenskeho v Bratislave (FMUNIBA, Slovakia
- Law and Internet Foundation, Bulgaria (LIF), Bulgaria