Digital Rights: Latin America and the Caribbean
- Publisher:
- FGV - Direito Rio
- Publication date:
- 2017-05-06
- Authors:
- Eduardo Magrani
- ISBN:
- 978-85-63265-85-2
Privacy and data protection
- Mapping the protection of privacy
- Privacy and security, the Latin American way
- Privacy and surveillance in Ecuador
- The friction between transparency and personal data protection in Peru
- Your fingerprint for a kilogram of flour: biometric and privacy in Venezuela
- Private profiles in public places
- Personal data, companies and the cloud: are we ready for it?
- The dangerous ambiguity of communications encryption rules in Colombia
- SECRET shakes up Guatemalan society
Freedom of expression
- An opinion in favor of freedom of expression on the Internet
- Freedom of expression violations on the online environment
- Paraguay: democracy and freedom of expression in digital justice
- A key tool in the struggle for a free Internet
- Freedom of expression on the Internet: opportunities and challenges for Latin America
- Spam elections
- Why obliging self-identification is wrong for freedom of information
- Guidelines for freedom of expression on the Internet in Latin America
- Political Internet censorship: a reality in Mexico (with a little help from the United States and GoDaddy.com)
- Documenting Internet blocking in Venezuela
- Toward freer lands on the Internet
- Online censorship is latent in Chile
Regulation
- Chilean bill on personal data protection is a setback for people and businesses
- Peru's controversial law on cybercrime
- The use of drones in Chile and DAN 151: innovation regulations are necessary, but insufficient
- Personal data: awaiting a text
- Civil Rights framework for Internet use: Brazil at the peak of Internet regulation as warrantor of rights
- Digital regulation challenges for the new government of Chile
- Human Rights as a bargaining chip: the case of #LeyTelecom
- 'Digital Argentina': regulation and future?
- Draft Bill 215/2015, infanticide to the newly-born digital rights in Brazil
- The Internet in Mexico, two years after #ReformaTelecom
- How we learned to stop worrying and love the ban
- A new Internet geography for Cuba
- From the cassette to ?the package,' or how to do streaming without Internet in Cuba
Internet governance
- Internet and statecraft: Brazil and the future of Internet governance
- Could Brazil become the leader in Internet governance?
- Mexico discusses Internet governance
- The region is preparing for the Internet governance forum
- NETmundial and the future of Internet governance
- Argentina and progress towards multistakeholder model
- The need for a digital agenda in Bolivia
- Internet governance in Colombia
- Civil society's role in the Internet governance debate
- My experience with the Internet
Copyright
- Copyright law reform in Brazil
- Colombian constitutional court overturned copyright law
- Access to culture and copyright in Uruguay: #noal218, a civil society victory
- The reform of collective management of music in Brazil
- Copyright in Argentina
- Copyright in Brazil
- The privatization of copyright enforcement: the Brazilian context
- A discussion that could finally change copyright in Peru
- Copyright and access to culture in the digital environment
- Open educational resources
- Exceptions and limitations to copyright for libraries and archives in Colombia: update & upgrade more than necessary
- Copyright in Chile
- Copyright in Colombia
Activism
- Activism and the Internet
- Right to protest and policing in social networks
- Internet and democracy: the protests of June in Brazil
- Hacking team in Chile: does the software comply with the minimum quality standards established by the Chilean legal system?
- Internet Rights in Ecuador: the possible triumph of activists?
- The online mobilization against Jair Bolsonaro, Julien Blanc and the rape culture
- Technology and political participation
- Collaborative development in Labhacker: including the 'external element'
- The Indignados movement in Central America reconfigures the traditional class struggle
- Hacking patriarchy: the first #femhack experience
Surveillance and cybercrime
- Limits to domestic espionage: what comes from within can also strike us
- Surveillance, Human Rights and the role of States: Rousseff's speech and Peña Nieto silence
- The Snowden case and the Brazilian reaction
- Chilean government to subject Chileans to American surveillance apparatus
- Information collection, location tracking & user awareness
- What transparency standards should we demand from States using surveillance technologies?
- FinFisher in Mexico: smile, you are still being spied
- Surveillance balloons: how much are we willing to give up in order to feel safer?
- The guardian who watches over the citizens
- Computer crime: the necessary Human Rights perspective
- Cybercrime in Brazil
- The challenges of criminal investigations in the age of Internet
- Cybercrime in Peru
- Postface
- About the Editor