Mark Burdon is Associate Professor of Law at Queensland University of Technology. His research interests include the regulation of information security practices, legislative frameworks for mandatory reporting of data breaches, and the onset of a 'sensor society'. Mark's most recent works focus on privacy issues arising from smart homes, particularly those involving domestic violence reporting and smart home insurance.
1. Introduction; Part I. The Collected World: 2. The smart world is the collected world; 3. The smart home: a collected target; 4. Commercialising the collected; Part II. Information Privacy Law's Concepts and Applications: 5. What information privacy protects; 6. How information privacy law protects; Part III. Information Privacy Law for a Collected Future: 7. Collected challenges; 8. Conceptualising the collected; 9. Using information privacy law to interrupt modulation; 10. A smart, collected or modulated world?