Bringing together philosophers of law and philosophers of technology, this book addresses the issues that arise in the tension between freedom of and property in information. Addresses business models, government strategies and legal frameworks concerning the collection, organisation and control of data, the book asks whether it is in the very nature of information to be free. Analysing the various political and ethical implications raised by this question - including, for example, open access, the hacker ethos, the market in information, and so on - this book will be of considerable interest…mehr
Bringing together philosophers of law and philosophers of technology, this book addresses the issues that arise in the tension between freedom of and property in information. Addresses business models, government strategies and legal frameworks concerning the collection, organisation and control of data, the book asks whether it is in the very nature of information to be free. Analysing the various political and ethical implications raised by this question - including, for example, open access, the hacker ethos, the market in information, and so on - this book will be of considerable interest to those working on the contemporary dimensions of freedom of information, data protection, and intellectual property rights.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Mireille Hildebrandt is a tenured Research Professor of 'Interfacing Law and Technology' at the Faculty of Law and Criminology at Vrije Universiteit Brussel. She also holds the parttime Chair of Smart Environments, Data Protection and the Rule of Law at the Science Faculty of Radboud University. Bibi van den Berg is an associate professor and research director at eLaw, the Center for Law and Digital Technologies at the Law School of Leiden University, the Netherlands.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I: The Matrix of Information 1. Gary Marx, Genies: Bottled and Unbottled. Some Thoughts Properties of Information 2. Mireille Hildebrandt, Properties and property of information Part II: The Powers of Information 3. Julie Cohen, Between Truth and Power 4. Linnet Taylor, Data subjects or data citizens? Addressing the global regulatory challenge of big data Part III: What freedom of what information? 5. David Koepsell and Philip Serracino Inglott: ICT's Architecture of Freedom 6. Alexandra Couto, Justice, freedom of expression and copyright Part IV An infra-ethics for an information society? 7. Luciano Floridi, The Design of Infraethics 8. Bibi van den Berg, Coping with information overload and information underload: Hemming in freedom of information through decision support.
Part I: The Matrix of Information 1. Gary Marx, Genies: Bottled and Unbottled. Some Thoughts Properties of Information 2. Mireille Hildebrandt, Properties and property of information Part II: The Powers of Information 3. Julie Cohen, Between Truth and Power 4. Linnet Taylor, Data subjects or data citizens? Addressing the global regulatory challenge of big data Part III: What freedom of what information? 5. David Koepsell and Philip Serracino Inglott: ICT's Architecture of Freedom 6. Alexandra Couto, Justice, freedom of expression and copyright Part IV An infra-ethics for an information society? 7. Luciano Floridi, The Design of Infraethics 8. Bibi van den Berg, Coping with information overload and information underload: Hemming in freedom of information through decision support.
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