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The structures of centralized governmental privacy protection: approaches,models, and analysis
Institution:1. Shanghai Jiaotong University, China;2. School of Law at Anhui Normal University, China;3. The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China;4. Tianjin University of Business and Economics, China;1. School of Management and Economics, Beijing Institute of Technology, China;2. Department of Computing and Information Systems, Sunway University, Malaysia;3. Department of Engineering, Universidad del Pacífico, Peru;4. Department of Convergence Security, Dankook University, Republic of Korea
Abstract:This article asserts that the United States federal government should adopt a centralized governmental structure for the privacy protection of personal information and data. There are a number of significant reasons, ranging from facilitation of the international dealings of United States corporations to the interactions of the United States government with other governments, for creating a centralized privacy protection structure for the United States federal government. This article examines the rise of centralized governmental privacy protection structures, identifies reasons for adopting such structures, and analyzes a selection of the structures used by various nations and states at present. From this analysis, the article presents a number of models of centralized governmental privacy protection structures. These models then form the basis of a discussion of what type of structural models of privacy protection would be most appropriate for the U.S. federal government.
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