30405 - FUNDAMENTALS OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY LAW
Course taught in English
Go to class group/s: 25
Class-group lessons delivered on campus
The course aims at providing a general overview on IT law and how it has evolved in order to respond to the rapid technological and social change. The first module basically introduces the key concepts of the relevant legal systems. The second module explores the relationship between law and technology with a view to highlighting the most critical legal issues raised by technological developments. After a general framework on the challenges raised by the Internet, the course explores the protection of fundamental rights (freedom of speech and data protection) and the emergence of new rights and actors on the digital sphere
- Introduction to the relevant legal systems
- Constitutions in cyberspace
- Freedom of expression in the digital age: a comparative overview
- The legal regime of Internet service providers
- Privacy and data protection
- The legal impact of disruptive technologies: AI and Blockchain
- Deal with the main issues regarding Internet regulation and the protection of fundamental rights in the digital era.
- Assessing the increasing or decreasing of protection of the fundamental rights at stake depending on the judicial balancing between contrasting values.
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
- Group assignments
- Guest speakers’ talks include lectures given by experts and professionals working in the IT industry.
- Case studies are discussed in order to introduce the subject of the relevant lectures or comment on the relevant legal and policy developments.
- Group assignments consist of presentations given by students on selected cases
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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Students are tested on the cases and materials discussed throughout classes in the general written exam. The written exam consists of a set of TRUE/FALSE questions, multiple-choice questions and one open question (short essay). Students’ active class participation also is taken into account.
- T/F questions, multiple-choice questions and the short essay permit to review students' ability to explore the legal issues discussed throughout the course, i.e. to understand and analyze legal issues in the IT field and the relevant challenges
Cases and materials provided on the Bboard platform