Optimization of Litigant Entities and Institutional Adaptation in Personal Information Public Interest Litigation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.70393/6a6574626d.323638ARK:
https://n2t.net/ark:/40704/JETBM.v2n1a01Disciplines:
LawSubjects:
Commercial LawReferences:
5Keywords:
Personal Information Protection, Public Interest Litigation, Procuratorial Organs, Punitive DamagesAbstract
With the rapid development of mobile Internet, the protection of personal information is becoming more and more serious. The actual rights and obligations between individuals as the most preventive subject in the Internet world and information users are gradually out of balance. From a technical point of view, compared with other subjects, individuals are faced with information infringement. Their ability to safeguard their rights is also relatively weak. In the long run, the right of citizens to protect personal information given by law may be useless. To this end, China issued the" Personal Information Protection Law" in 2021 to make structural provisions for personal information protection civil public interest litigation to cope with the increasingly severe situation of personal information protection. As a new form of public interest litigation, its system still needs to be improved.
References
[1] Li, Z. (Ed.). (2007). Law and economics. University of Electronic Science and Technology Press. p. 285.
[2] Zhang, W. D., & Hu, X. (2020). The construction of administrative public interest litigation system for personal information in the big data era. Journal of Northwest University (Philosophy and Social Sciences Edition), (4), 69–80.
[3] Yao, J. (2019). Re-understanding of Chinese consumer law theory: Focusing on consumer movement and private law basis. Politics and Law, (4), 131–140, 117.
[4] Li, H. (2020). The evolution of the plaintiff subject in civil public interest litigation. Jianghai Academic Journal, (1), 1–9.
[5] Zhang, C. G. (2021). The procedural logic and normative interpretation of civil public interest litigation on personal information protection. Journal of the National Prosecutors College, (6).

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