Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-2020

Journal Title

Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy

ISSN

1069-0565

Abstract

In the age of the Cambridge Analytica/Facebook scandal and sundry other data breaches at Under Armour, Target, and Best Buy, the issue of security and privacy in consumer data has become increasingly important. For much of the modern era, the development of technology has gone relatively unchecked, with the United States having ceded much of the policymaking terrain to Silicon Valley. This has resulted in the unbridled creation of vast amounts of consumer data. Users who engage with tech platforms generate bits and bytes about themselves based on their activities, preferences, and habits. This information — “data” — is then harnessed by tech companies for a variety of purposes ranging from advertising to market analytics, and more, leaving privacy as an afterthought.

In terms of defining the legal rights around personal data, scholars have argued that the United States abandoned a property law view long ago in preference to a tort-based approach. This has resulted in data protection regimes being focused on liability rules, yielding compensation remedies when electronic information has been used in an unauthorized or impermissible way. Although various efforts have been made to introduce property rules to data in the United States, they have produced varying results or have failed outright.

But during the 2018 term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided two important cases that, albeit indirectly, edged toward a more robust conception of data as property — South Dakota v. Wayfair and Carpenter v. United States. In both cases, however, the Court struggled with how to articulate this concept. Sometimes the Court appeared to cling tightly to bedrock pillars of property law, such as physicality and alienability. At other times, however, the justices seemed to be treading new ground (or rediscovering old roads), such as with the disaggregation of digital rights and the idea of involuntary electronic bailments. Building upon the leanings of these recent cases, this Article — in celebration of Professor Gregory Alexander—offers up progressive property theory as a lens through which courts and legislatures can build rules and standards for data as property. To do this, I draw upon Professor Alexander’s work in the property theory literature and its ideals of social obligations, dignity, and owner responsibility in property rights.

First Page

643

Last Page

673

Num Pages

31

Volume Number

29

Issue Number

3

Publisher

Cornell Law School

File Type

PDF

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