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THE EVOLUTION OF PRIVACY LAWS IN THE DIGITAL AGE

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Abstract

The revolution of the digital era has swept through privacy laws across the globe. Widespread application of data harvesting, storage, and transmission on digital media, social networks, and Internet of Things (IoT) has posed connected legal and ethical questions regarding protection of personal data. This paper discusses the evolution of privacy laws, with a focus on the change from traditional legal structures to modern, data-oriented laws. It covers significant milestones in privacy legislation, such as the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), and the impact of emerging technologies on the application and interpretation of privacy laws. The research discovers the relevant problems that the digital age has raised, including data protection vs. innovation, consent and transparency problems, and mounting issues of data breaches and cyber security. The essay also considers the role played by international co-operation in shaping privacy law through terms of global data flows and cross-national data exchange. From a review of existing case law and scholarship, the paper gives the evolution of privacy law from their earliest origins through to today and considers the future of privacy protection in an increasingly networked world. It finally advocates for flexible legal regimes that evolve to keep up with ongoing technological change without trading off individual rights to privacy.

Keywords

Privacy Laws, Data Protection, GDPR, Digital Age, Consent, Cross-border Data Sharing, Artificial Intelligence

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