News and Events
Regulation of algorithms for Facebook, Twitter & Co.?
The responsibility of media intermediaries for the diversity of democratic discourse will be the topic of an exciting lecture on Wednesday, January 27, 2021, from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m..The lecturer will be Prof. Dr. Jürgen Kühling LL.M. from the University of Regensburg. The event of Saarbrücken's Colloquium for Information and Media Law (IMK) will be held online. Further information is available from the IMK.
Lecture series: Data protection in practice
The Institute of Legal Informatics invites you: Starting January 5th 2021, the public lecture series "Data Protection in Practice" will begin. State data protection commissioners, corporate data protection commissioners and other high-profile data protection experts will present an exciting mix of current topics online. On seven evenings in January and February, experts from the field will provide answers to highly relevant questions - including yours.
Volkswagen Foundation approves funding for "EIS" project
For the second time, the Institute of Legal Informatics has been awarded a contract by the Volkswagen Foundation for the project "Explainability of Intelligent Systems" (EIS). The project is part of the Volkswagen Foundation initiative: "Artificial Intelligence - Its Impact on Tomorrow's Society". The aim is to design intelligent systems that support decision-makers in making responsible and well-informed decisions.
Tax ID as personal identifier unconstitutional?
On December 14th, Prof. Dr. Christoph Sorge, as an invited expert in the German Bundestag's Committee on Home Affairs and the Homeland Security, criticized the introduction of the tax ID as a general personal identification number as a part of the Register Modernization Act. As a general personal identification number, he assessed the introduction to be unconstitutional and the protective measures provided to be deficient.
Institute of Legal Informatics relaunches the “Monday Mail”
Whether student, lawyer or judge – current decisions of the Federal Court of Justice (BGH) form the basis of every legal practitioner. However, the BGH's traditional "Monday Mail," which provides information about the most recent decisions of the previous week, has not been accessible to the general public until now. This is going to change now: After an initial successful test run, the electronic “Monday Mail” is now being launched.