Final Case Study Compilation with Intro and Conclusion
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Legal Rights of Society in General
When thinking of legal rights that society have in general it is important to think about where these ideas originated from, so there is a good idea of why these legal rights exist at all. One line of thought for legal rights to citizens is captured in a book that attempts to analyze all of society and examines great text that could be used as rationale for decision making for society. (Pattaro, 2009, p. 100) The works in question include Plato, Heidegger, Thomas Aquinas, the Bible, the Qur’an, and many other books that were the building blocks of society. (Pattaro, 2009, p. 100) What the significance of these books entail is that they set legal precedent for the rights we have in society which is defined as legal norms or morals. (Pattaro, 2009, p. 101) The reason that legal rights are important to have and understand the origin is due to when companies like Google attempt to use information they have gathered in an unethical way and attempt to push decisions based on information a legal citizen has given them. What the concern is, is that there is an increasing push for globalism in society by larger corporations, so that there is a larger swathe of income to gain and to assert dominance in the domain that they are attempting to perfect. As with colonialism there are similarities the ideology of globalism share with it, like “With a propensity to overstate the singularity of the present, these often posit a radical discontinuity between contemporary social life and that in the recent past.” (Randeria, 2007, p. 4) So, the combination of globalization and the review of legal origin for many cultures is the starting point of how society has and instills their legal rights when attempting to protect themselves against unethical business decisions made by companies like Google and will use these protections against other corporations as well.
Legal Rights of Those Directly Involved
References Alejandre, G. M. (2012). Google cache is legal in Spain - Spanish Supreme Court, 3 April 2012, The Megakini.com v Google Spain case. Queen Mary Journal of Intellectual Property, 81-89. Mitchell-Rekrut, C. (2015). Search engine liability under the LIBE data regulation proposal: interpreting third party responsibilities as informed by Google Spain. Georgetown Journal of International Law, 861-891. Pattaro, E. (2009). Law, Brain, and Society. International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 99-109. Randeria, S. (2007). The State of Globalization: Legal Plurality, Overlapping Sovereignties and Ambiguous Alliances between Civil Society and the Cunning State in India. Theory, Culture & Society , 1-33.