A remotely accessible networking laboratory
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Evolving a CS networking emphasis
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Four billion little brothers?: privacy, mobile phones, and ubiquitous data collection
Communications of the ACM - Scratch Programming for All
Ethics and Information Technology
Participatory design of sensing networks: strengths and challenges
Proceedings of the Tenth Anniversary Conference on Participatory Design 2008
Are the OECD guidelines at 30 showing their age?
Communications of the ACM
Participatory personal data: An emerging research challenge for the information sciences
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
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Privacy is a growing concern in the United States and around the world. The spread of the Internet and the seemingly boundaryless options for collecting, saving, sharing, and comparing information trigger consumer worries. Online practices of business and government agencies may present new ways to compromise privacy, and e-commerce and technologies that make a wide range of personal information available to anyone with a Web browser only begin to hint at the possibilities for inappropriate or unwarranted intrusion into our personal lives."Engaging Privacy and Information Technology in a Digital Age" presents a comprehensive and multidisciplinary examination of privacy in the information age. It explores such important concepts as how the threats to privacy evolving, how can privacy be protected and how society can balance the interests of individuals, businesses and government in ways that promote privacy reasonably and effectively? This book seeks to raise awareness of the web of connectedness among the actions one takes and the privacy policies that are enacted, and provides a variety of tools and concepts with which debates over privacy can be more fruitfully engaged. "Engaging Privacy and Information Technology in a Digital Age" focuses on three major components affecting notions, perceptions, and expectations of privacy: technological change, societal shifts, and circumstantial discontinuities. This book will be of special interest to anyone interested in understanding why privacy issues are often so intractable.