Protecting personality rights on the Internet
16 Mar 2022
Program:
Part I. The specific nature of the personality rights protection process
- The particular way in which liability for breach of personality rights is structured (breach, unlawfulness, culpability)
- Protecting corporate personality rights
- Handling cases of breach of personality rights in the media
- Collating evidence independently and new rules on injunctions, and rules on disclosing/handover of evidence in court proceedings
- Injunctive relief for claims in personality rights protection cases
- Reporting breaches: Facebook/Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Linkedin, Polish internet sites
- The latest Polish and EU adjudications on protection of personality rights, including Jezior v. Poland (31955/11), CJEU
- judgment of 3.10.2019 in case C-18/18, Supreme Court judgment of 30.09.2016 (I CSK 598/15)
Part II. Liability of a perpetrator and liability of an internet intermediary
- Who is the internet intermediary under current laws (E-commerce Directive /Electronic Services Act, Regulation 2019/1150)
- Special rules on liability of intermediaries – notice&takedown and notice&takeaction
- The rule that a general monitoring requirement cannot be imposed, and the option of making filtering for specific content obligatory
- Identifying a person directly responsible for a breach
- Areas of changes in 2021 (Digital Services Act)
Part III. Protecting privacy and the right to be forgotten
- The origin of the right to be forgotten – CJEU judgment in case C-131/12
- Exercise of the right to erasure (art. 17 GDPR)
- Differing approaches to protection of personal data and personality rights
- Civil liability for breach of data protection laws
- Exercise of the right to erasure in a civil case (legal precedent in Supreme Court judgment of 13.12.2018, I CSK 690/17)