Dear colleagues, I hope this e-mail finds you well. Please find enclosed my recently published discussion paper on data governance <https://zenodo.org/record/6457735#.YnoJeNNBwqw>, which may be of interest to you. In various projects at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society and at the Einstein Center Digital Future, I have worked over the last years on a conceptual data governance framework that should facilitate the (comparative) analysis of different data governance models, individual elements or contributions with regard to their suitability for resolving conflicts of interest in data. The framework ends with a brief analysis of several draft laws from the EU Digital Services Package and explores the question of the extent to which these draft laws promote data governance structures in Europe or, if necessary, require further adaptation. Of course, I would be very glad of any kind of feedback :) Kind regards, Max von Grafenstein — Prof. Dr. Max von Grafenstein LL.M. Head of Research | Governance of Data-Driven Innovation Attorney at Law — NEW PUBLICATIONS: Reconciling Conflicting Interests in Data through Data Governance. An Analytical Framework (and a Brief Discussion of the Data Governance Act Draft, the Data Act Draft, the AI Regulation Draft, as well as the GDPR). v. Grafenstein, M. (2022) in: HIIG Discussion Paper Series No. 2022-02. Online available under: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4104502 Co-Regulation and the Competitive Advantage in the GDPR: Data protection certification mechanisms, codes of conduct and the “state of the art” of data protection-by-design. v. Grafenstein, M. (2022). In: González-Fuster, G., van Brakel, R. and P. De Hert, Research Handbook on Privacy and Data Protection Law. Values, Norms and Global Politics, Edward Elgar Publishing, 1st Ed.. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. Online available under: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3336990 Specific certification schemes as rule, general schemes (and criteria) as exception: Comment on Addendum to Guidelines 1/2018 on certification and identifying certification criteria per Articles 42 and 43 of the regulation. v. Grafenstein, HIIG Discussion Paper, online available under https://zenodo.org/record/4905484#.YVsF4WYzZ0t Effective regulation through design - Aligning the ePrivacy Regulation with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR): Tracking technologies in personalised internet content and the data protection by design approach. v. Grafenstein et al., https://zenodo.org/record/5008420#.YVsGkmYzZ0t Refining the Concept of the Right to Data Protection in Article 8 ECFR – Part III: Consequences for the Interpretation of the GDPR (And the Lawmaker’s Room for Maneuver). v. Grafenstein (expected in EDPL 3/2021, preprint online available https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3840126 Refining the Concept of the Right to Data Protection in Article 8 ECFR – Part II: Controlling Risks Through (not to) Article 8 ECFR Against Other Fundamental Rights. EDPL Volume 7 (2021), Issue 2, pp. 190 - 205. Refining the Concept of the Right to Data Protection in Article 8 ECFR – Part I: Finding an Appropriate Object and Concept of Protection by Re-Connecting Data Protection Law with Concepts of Risk Regulation. Grafenstein, M. v. (2020). EDPL Volume 6 (2020), Issue 4, pp. 509 - 521.