dr Mateusz Grochowski
Zakład Prawa Prywatnego i Własności Intelektualnej
e-mail: mateusz.f.grochowski@gmail.com
FORMA
Consumer Law in Poland : Or There and Back Again
Współautorstwo: Wiewiórowska-Domagalska, Aneta
The Making of Consumer Law and Policy in Europe / Hans-W. Micklitz (ed.) – Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2021, s. 193-234.
Cytowania Default Rules Beyond a State : Special-Purpose Lawmakers in the Platform Economy
European contract law and the creation of norms / edited by Stefan Grundmann, Mateusz Grochowski. Cambridge ; Antwerp ; Chicago : Intersentia, 2021, s. 227-253.
Cytowania The Creation of Norms : an Evolutionary View on European Contract Law
Współautorstwo: Grundmann, Stefan
European contract law and the creation of norms / edited by Stefan Grundmann, Mateusz Grochowski. Cambridge ; Antwerp ; Chicago : Intersentia, 2021, s. 3-45.
Cytowania Redakcja:
European contract law and the creation of norms
Współredaktorstwo: Grundmann, Stefan
Cambridge ; Antwerp ; Chicago : Intersentia, 2021
Seria: European Contract Law and Theory Series vol. 5
ISBN 9781780689654
310 stron.
Cytowania Does European contract law need a new concept of vulnerability?
Journal of European Consumer and Market Law 2021, t. 10, nr 4, s. 133-135.
During recent years, European contract law experienced one of the most momentous changes in its entire history. Since the 2017 Fitness Check, it has been substantially transforming into a new regulatory and political project, expanding far beyond its conventional agenda. As this process is still far from reaching a conclusion, it is – even more than ever – worth critically rethinking our established understanding of the identity and aims of European contract law.
Cytowania Towards a Renaissance of Price Control in Contract Law? : Preliminary Observations on COVID-19 and Price Regulation on Consumer Market
Coronavirus and the law in Europe / edited by Ewoud Hondius, Marta Santos Silva, Andrea Nicolussi, Pablo Salvador Coderch, Christiane Wendehorst, Fryderyk Zoll. Cambridge ; Antwerp ; Chicago : Intersentia, 2021, s. 891-910.
This contribution addresses the dilemma of retail price regulation on the consumer market in the economic realities triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. It discusses the reinvigoration of discussion over price control that ensued in numerous countries as a result of the rapid increase of prices of certain goods (such as medical products and everyday-use utensils). It attempts to preliminarily frame the underlying policy premises of price regulation triggered by the pandemic. It also seeks a more in-depth understanding of the rationale of price review in the extraordinary market conditions, as well as the general rules for allocation of tasks in this regard between public and private law. In so doing, the text focuses primarily on the EU consumer law and attempts to understand what concept of price control it rests on and to what extent it may provide a response to the price concerns in the outcome of COVID-19.
Algorithmic Transparency and Explainability for EU Consumer Protection : Unwrapping the Regulatory Premises
Critical Analysis of Law 2021, t. 8, nr 1, s. 43-63.
Współautorstwo: Jabłonowska, Agnieszka; Lagioia, Francesca; Sartor, Giovani
The principles of transparency and explainability are landmarks of the current EU approach to artificial intelligence. Both are invoked in the policy guidelines as values governing algorithmic decision-making, while providing rationales for existing normative provisions, on information duties, access rights and control powers. This contribution addresses the debate on transparency and explainability from the EU consumer market perspective. The consumers’ position relative to algorithmic decision-making is considered, and their risks concerning mass surveillance, exploitation, and manipulation are discussed. The concept of algorithmic opacity is analyzed, distinguishing technology-based opacity that is intrinsic to design choices, from relational opacity toward users. The response of EU law is then considered. The emerging approach to algorithmic transparency and explainability is connected to the broader regulatory goals concerning transparency in consumer markets. It is argued that EU law focuses on adequate information being provided to lay consumers (exoteric transparency), rather than on understandability to experts (esoteric transparency). A discussion follows on the benefits of transparency, on its costs, and on the extent to which transparency can be implemented without affecting performance. Finally, the merits of a transparency-based regulation of algorithms are discussed and insights are provided on regulating transparency and explainability within the EU law paradigm.
Cytowania



