A GIFT OF FIRE A GIFT OF FIRE
One point four Ethics twenty-six
Two point three point one Marketing and Personalization seventy
Two point three point three Location Tracking seventy-nine
Two point four Government Systems eighty-four
Two point four point two Public Records: Access versus Privacy ninety
Four point one point four The Fair Use Doctrine one hundred eighty-six
Four point one point six Significant Legal Cases one hundred ninety
Four point two point one Defensive and Aggressive Responses From the Content Industries one hundred ninety-six
Four point two point three The Digital Millennium Copyright Act: Safe Harbor two hundred four. Four point two point four Evolving Business Models two hundred six
Five point two Hacking two hundred thirty
Six point two Impacts on Employment two hundred seventy-seven. Six point two point one Job Destruction and Creation two hundred seventy-seven
Six point two point three Telecommuting two hundred eighty-four
Six point three Employee Communication and Monitoring two hundred ninety-three. Six point three point one Learning About Job Applicants two hundred ninety-three
Nine PROFESSIONAL ETHICS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
Nine point two Ethical Guidelines for Computer Professionals four hundred five. Nine point two point one Special Aspects of Professional Ethics four hundred five
Changes for the Fourth Edition
Chapter Five has new sections on
Chapter Six has new sections on
Chapter Seven has expanded sections on
One point one. The Pace of Change
One point four. Ethics Exercises
One point two. Change and Unexpected Developments
One point two point one. Connections: Cellphones, Social Networking, and More
Communication and the Web
One point two point two E-Commerce and Free Stuff
One point two point three Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Sensors, and Motion
Smart sensors, motion, and control
One point two point four Tools for disabled people
Old problems in a new context
Adapting to new technology
Varied sources of solutions to problems
The global reach of the Net
Trade-offs and controversy
Perfection is a direction, not an option.
Differences between personal choices, business policies, and law
One point four point two. A VARIETY OF ETHICAL VIEWS
Negative and positive rights, or liberties and claim rights
Social contracts and a theory of political justice twenty-four
Do organizations have ethics?
One point four point three Some Important Distinctions
Distinguishing wrong and harm
Separating goals from constraints
Personal preference and ethics
Class Discussion Exercises
Two point one Privacy Risks and Principles
Two point six Communications Exercises
Two point one point one WHAT Is PRIVACY?
Two point one point two NEW TECHNOLOGY, NEW RISKS
Hacking: Section five point two
Two point one point three TERMINOLOGY AND PRINCIPLES FOR MANAGING PERSONAL DATA
Informed consent and invisible information gathering
Secondary use, data mining, matching, and profiling
Fair information principles
Two point two The Fourth Amendment, Expectation of Privacy, and Surveillance Technologies
Two point two point one THE FOURTH AMENDMENT
Two point two point two New Technologies, Supreme Court Decisions, and Expectation of Privacy
"Noninvasive but deeply revealing" searches
Supreme Court decisions and expectation of privacy
Tracking cars and cellphones
Two point two point three SEARCH AND SEIZURE OF COMPUTERS AND PHONES
Two point two point four Video Surveillance and Face Recognition
Two point three. The Business and Social Sectors
Two point three point two OUR SOCIAL AND PERSONAL ACTIVITY
Social networks-what they do
Responsibility of free services
Two point three point three LOCATION TRACKING
Foiling poachers, following turtles, tracking guitars
Two point three point four A RIGHT TO BE FORGOTTEN
Two point four Government Systems
Database example: tracking college students
Reducing privacy intrusions for air travel
Two point four point two PUBLIC RECORDS: ACCESS VERSUS PRIVACY
Two point four point three National ID Systems
Two point five Protecting Privacy: Technology, Markets, Rights, and Laws
Protections against identity theft: Section five point three point two have advantages and disadvantages; they do not solve all problems.
Policies for protecting personal data
Two point five point two Rights and Law
Warren and Brandeis: The inviolate personality
Judith Jarvis Thomson: Is there a right to privacy?
Criticisms of Warren and Brandeis and of Thomson
Ownership of personal data