dinsdag 29 september 2015

Promoting European audiovisual content... A media framework for young & old...

...

Vous pouvez commenter. Sur la recherche d'un nouveau modèle économique. Comme dans Corporate Social Responsibility ou Business Ethics. Sur l'éthique et la déontologie et les questions essentielles. Sur les subventions qui voyagent et l'optimisation fiscale.

https://ec.europa.eu/dgs/connect/en/content/digital-social-platforms:

Head of Unit: I. Iakovidis (acting) Tel: +32-2-29 52329

We seek to deploy ICT more widely in areas that will allow people to age well.

- Active and Healthy Ageing

...

https://ec.europa.eu/dgs/connect/en/who-we-are?

http://www.oecd.org/sti/ieconomy/childrenonline_with_cover.pdf:

[...]

Several countries, as well as the EU, recognise that self- and co-regulation plays an important
role for the protection of children online and consider voluntary commitments as a key component
of national policies. Business-value these instruments as a means to demonstrate social responsibility
and commitment. Therefore, the protection of children online is a prolific area of self- and
co-regulatory initiatives which can take various forms and are sometimes referred to as codes of
conduct, industry guidelines and best practices.

[...]

Countries deploy various strategies to encourage self-and co-regulation such as by i) making
explicit reference to these mechanisms in legislations; ii) giving a mandate to regulatory
authorities to negotiate with stakeholders voluntary commitments; iii) creating platforms for
stakeholders to convene; and iv) stirring problematic areas by threatening to resort to “command
and control” style regulation. The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in the
United States, for instance contains a statutory safe harbour provision -- if a website participates
in a safe harbour programme, it is afforded a presumption of being COPPA compliant if the
website is in compliance with the requirements of the authorised safe harbor.113 Public-private
partnerships where voluntary agreements have been brokered with strong public sector
involvement (detailed below) led to recent self-regulatory initiatives involving mobile network
operators and operators of social network sites in the European Union and the United States.114 It
appears that in particular public-private partnerships are successful in delivering effective
voluntary commitments by industry with the aim to protect children against harm online.
Existing models can be classified according to whether i) it is co-regulation or self-regulation
ii) it is an industry led commitment or it involves all relevant stakeholders; iii) it applies to one
country or represents a regional agreement; and iv) it is a single group’s standard or collective
agreement.

[...]

Voir la bibliographie à la page 98:

[...]

Bartoli, E. (2009), “Children's Data Protection vs. Marketing Companies”. International Review of Law, Computers & Technology, 23(1-2), 35-45.

[...]

Stross, R. (2010), “Computers at Home: Educational Hope vs. Teenage Reality”. The New York Times. Published on 9 July 2010. Available at:
www.nytimes.com/2010/07/11/business/11digi.html.

[...]

Portefeuille overgenomen door Günther Oettinger en Andrus Ansip.

http://www.lemonde.fr/piXels/article/2015/09/29/playstation-disques-cd-3d-il-y-a-vingt-ans-le-jeu-video-entamait-sa-revolution_4776616_4408996.html

P.s: Les parents face au commerce et au marketing sont responsables, les jeunes aussi. Qui est responsable de quoi dans les postes à responsabilités très correctement rémunérés? Voir aussi: https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumentenelektronica.

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