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From Encryption to Quantum Computing

The Governance of Information Security and Human Rights

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  • © 2025

Overview

  • This book provides unique insight into the connection between human rights and information security
  • This is one of the few books which analyses the human rights-compatibility of quantum computing governance
  • The book is the first to apply a human rights framework while understanding information security as a continuous process

Part of the book series: Information Technology and Law Series (ITLS, volume 38)

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About this book

This book examines the implications of information security which plays such an important role in modern digital infrastructure. Information security technologies restrict the (mis)use of this infrastructure, while also constantly being probed by researchers, intelligence agencies and criminals. One can see this cycle of making and breaking everywhere in the digital sphere. An important example of this cat-and-mouse game is the development of quantum computers, which may in the near future break some widely used encryption technologies.

This cycle also has implications for human rights: weakening encryption may affect privacy, for example. But the relationship between human rights and information security has not been investigated in-depth before. In this study, state obligations relating to information security are analysed under the European Convention for Human Rights and the EU Charter for Fundamental Rights, focusing on issues as human rights-compatible encryption policy, on how governments should deal with vulnerabilities in software, and whether governments can curtail the development and export of quantum computers.

This book analyses the human rights-compatibility of quantum computing governance and offers unique insights into the connection between human rights and information security that will be relevant for legal practitioners, policy-makers and academics involved in this field of research.

Ot van Daalen is Assistant Professor at the Institute for Information Law (IViR), Faculty of Law of the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Keywords

Table of contents (11 chapters)

  1. The Landscape

  2. The Human Rights Framework

  3. Synthesis

Authors and Affiliations

  • Institute for Information Law (IViR), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Ot van Daalen

Bibliographic Information

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