The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Privacy
Herausgeber: Selinger, Evan; Tene, Omer; Polonetsky, Jules
The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Privacy
Herausgeber: Selinger, Evan; Tene, Omer; Polonetsky, Jules
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This is the only comprehensive book on consumer privacy. It brings together world-class and highly diverse scholars, activists, business leaders, and policymakers. It is the only volume that readers need to consult to learn why consumer privacy is hotly debated and how progress can be made on the key issues.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Cambridge Handbook of Consumer Privacy66,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook of Smart Contracts, Blockchain Technology and Digital Platforms48,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms62,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook of European Monetary, Economic and Financial Integration231,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook of Private Law and Artificial Intelligence227,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook on the Material Constitution194,99 €
- The Cambridge Handbook of the Sustainable Development Goals and International Law192,99 €
-
-
-
This is the only comprehensive book on consumer privacy. It brings together world-class and highly diverse scholars, activists, business leaders, and policymakers. It is the only volume that readers need to consult to learn why consumer privacy is hotly debated and how progress can be made on the key issues.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Cambridge Law Handbooks
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 610
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 266mm x 192mm x 42mm
- Gewicht: 1276g
- ISBN-13: 9781107181106
- ISBN-10: 1107181100
- Artikelnr.: 50447142
- Cambridge Law Handbooks
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 610
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 266mm x 192mm x 42mm
- Gewicht: 1276g
- ISBN-13: 9781107181106
- ISBN-10: 1107181100
- Artikelnr.: 50447142
Introduction: 1. Consumer privacy and the future of society' Jules
Polonetsky, Omer Tene and Evan Selinger; Part I. The Pervasiveness and
Value of Tracking Technologies: 2. 'Data brokers - should they be reviled
or revered? Jennifer Barrett Glasgow; 3. In defense of big data analytics
Mark MacCarthy; 4. Education technology and student privacy Elena Zeide; 5.
Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices
Kristen Martin and Katie Shilton; 6. Face recognition, real-time
identification, and beyond Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer; 7. The city as
platform: enhancing privacy and transparency in smart communities Omer Tene
and Kelsey Finch; Part II. Ethical and Legal Reservations about Tracking
Technologies: 8.Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg National
Surveys in perspective Joseph Turow; 9. The Federal Trade Commission's
inner privacy struggle Chris Jay Hoofnagle; 10. Privacy and human behavior
in the information age Alessandro Acquisiti, Laura Branimarte and George
Lowenstein; 11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordances Ryan Calo; 12.
Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their
customers Michelle N. Meyer; 13. Algorithmic discrimination vs. privacy law
Alvaro Bedoya; 14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities Stephen
Balkam; 15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not
track Aleecia M. McDonald; 16. Applying ethics when using data beyond
individuals' understanding Martin Abrams and Lynn Goldstein; Part III.
International Perspectives: 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to
data protection Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm; 18. Privacy, freedom
of expression, and the right to be forgotten in Europe Stefan Kulk and
Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius; 19. Understanding the balancing act behind
the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach Paul
de Hert and Irene Kamara; Part IV. New Approaches to Improve the Status
Quo: 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection Julie Brill;
21. A design space for effective privacy notices Florian Schaub, Rebecca
Balebako, Adam L. Durity and Lorrie Faith Cranor; 22. Enter the
professionals: organizational privacy in the digital age J. Trevor Hughes
and Cobun Keegan; 23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, best
practices Mike Hintze; 24. Privacy versus research in big data Jane R.
Bambauer; 25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering
and innovation Courtney Bowman and John Grant; 26. The missing role of
economics in FTC privacy policy James Cooper and Joshua Wright; 27. Big
data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics Dale
Skivington, Lisa Zolidis and Brian P. O'Connor; 28. The future of
self-regulation is co-regulation Ira Rubenstein; 29. Privacy notices:
limitations, challenges, and opportunities Mary Culan and Paula Bruening;
30. It takes data to protect data David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo;
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible?
Adam Thierer; 32. Privacy after the agile turn Seda Gurses and Joris van
Hoboken.
Polonetsky, Omer Tene and Evan Selinger; Part I. The Pervasiveness and
Value of Tracking Technologies: 2. 'Data brokers - should they be reviled
or revered? Jennifer Barrett Glasgow; 3. In defense of big data analytics
Mark MacCarthy; 4. Education technology and student privacy Elena Zeide; 5.
Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices
Kristen Martin and Katie Shilton; 6. Face recognition, real-time
identification, and beyond Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer; 7. The city as
platform: enhancing privacy and transparency in smart communities Omer Tene
and Kelsey Finch; Part II. Ethical and Legal Reservations about Tracking
Technologies: 8.Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg National
Surveys in perspective Joseph Turow; 9. The Federal Trade Commission's
inner privacy struggle Chris Jay Hoofnagle; 10. Privacy and human behavior
in the information age Alessandro Acquisiti, Laura Branimarte and George
Lowenstein; 11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordances Ryan Calo; 12.
Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their
customers Michelle N. Meyer; 13. Algorithmic discrimination vs. privacy law
Alvaro Bedoya; 14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities Stephen
Balkam; 15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not
track Aleecia M. McDonald; 16. Applying ethics when using data beyond
individuals' understanding Martin Abrams and Lynn Goldstein; Part III.
International Perspectives: 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to
data protection Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm; 18. Privacy, freedom
of expression, and the right to be forgotten in Europe Stefan Kulk and
Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius; 19. Understanding the balancing act behind
the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach Paul
de Hert and Irene Kamara; Part IV. New Approaches to Improve the Status
Quo: 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection Julie Brill;
21. A design space for effective privacy notices Florian Schaub, Rebecca
Balebako, Adam L. Durity and Lorrie Faith Cranor; 22. Enter the
professionals: organizational privacy in the digital age J. Trevor Hughes
and Cobun Keegan; 23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, best
practices Mike Hintze; 24. Privacy versus research in big data Jane R.
Bambauer; 25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering
and innovation Courtney Bowman and John Grant; 26. The missing role of
economics in FTC privacy policy James Cooper and Joshua Wright; 27. Big
data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics Dale
Skivington, Lisa Zolidis and Brian P. O'Connor; 28. The future of
self-regulation is co-regulation Ira Rubenstein; 29. Privacy notices:
limitations, challenges, and opportunities Mary Culan and Paula Bruening;
30. It takes data to protect data David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo;
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible?
Adam Thierer; 32. Privacy after the agile turn Seda Gurses and Joris van
Hoboken.
Introduction: 1. Consumer privacy and the future of society' Jules
Polonetsky, Omer Tene and Evan Selinger; Part I. The Pervasiveness and
Value of Tracking Technologies: 2. 'Data brokers - should they be reviled
or revered? Jennifer Barrett Glasgow; 3. In defense of big data analytics
Mark MacCarthy; 4. Education technology and student privacy Elena Zeide; 5.
Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices
Kristen Martin and Katie Shilton; 6. Face recognition, real-time
identification, and beyond Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer; 7. The city as
platform: enhancing privacy and transparency in smart communities Omer Tene
and Kelsey Finch; Part II. Ethical and Legal Reservations about Tracking
Technologies: 8.Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg National
Surveys in perspective Joseph Turow; 9. The Federal Trade Commission's
inner privacy struggle Chris Jay Hoofnagle; 10. Privacy and human behavior
in the information age Alessandro Acquisiti, Laura Branimarte and George
Lowenstein; 11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordances Ryan Calo; 12.
Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their
customers Michelle N. Meyer; 13. Algorithmic discrimination vs. privacy law
Alvaro Bedoya; 14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities Stephen
Balkam; 15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not
track Aleecia M. McDonald; 16. Applying ethics when using data beyond
individuals' understanding Martin Abrams and Lynn Goldstein; Part III.
International Perspectives: 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to
data protection Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm; 18. Privacy, freedom
of expression, and the right to be forgotten in Europe Stefan Kulk and
Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius; 19. Understanding the balancing act behind
the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach Paul
de Hert and Irene Kamara; Part IV. New Approaches to Improve the Status
Quo: 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection Julie Brill;
21. A design space for effective privacy notices Florian Schaub, Rebecca
Balebako, Adam L. Durity and Lorrie Faith Cranor; 22. Enter the
professionals: organizational privacy in the digital age J. Trevor Hughes
and Cobun Keegan; 23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, best
practices Mike Hintze; 24. Privacy versus research in big data Jane R.
Bambauer; 25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering
and innovation Courtney Bowman and John Grant; 26. The missing role of
economics in FTC privacy policy James Cooper and Joshua Wright; 27. Big
data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics Dale
Skivington, Lisa Zolidis and Brian P. O'Connor; 28. The future of
self-regulation is co-regulation Ira Rubenstein; 29. Privacy notices:
limitations, challenges, and opportunities Mary Culan and Paula Bruening;
30. It takes data to protect data David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo;
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible?
Adam Thierer; 32. Privacy after the agile turn Seda Gurses and Joris van
Hoboken.
Polonetsky, Omer Tene and Evan Selinger; Part I. The Pervasiveness and
Value of Tracking Technologies: 2. 'Data brokers - should they be reviled
or revered? Jennifer Barrett Glasgow; 3. In defense of big data analytics
Mark MacCarthy; 4. Education technology and student privacy Elena Zeide; 5.
Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices
Kristen Martin and Katie Shilton; 6. Face recognition, real-time
identification, and beyond Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer; 7. The city as
platform: enhancing privacy and transparency in smart communities Omer Tene
and Kelsey Finch; Part II. Ethical and Legal Reservations about Tracking
Technologies: 8.Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg National
Surveys in perspective Joseph Turow; 9. The Federal Trade Commission's
inner privacy struggle Chris Jay Hoofnagle; 10. Privacy and human behavior
in the information age Alessandro Acquisiti, Laura Branimarte and George
Lowenstein; 11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordances Ryan Calo; 12.
Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their
customers Michelle N. Meyer; 13. Algorithmic discrimination vs. privacy law
Alvaro Bedoya; 14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities Stephen
Balkam; 15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not
track Aleecia M. McDonald; 16. Applying ethics when using data beyond
individuals' understanding Martin Abrams and Lynn Goldstein; Part III.
International Perspectives: 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to
data protection Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm; 18. Privacy, freedom
of expression, and the right to be forgotten in Europe Stefan Kulk and
Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius; 19. Understanding the balancing act behind
the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach Paul
de Hert and Irene Kamara; Part IV. New Approaches to Improve the Status
Quo: 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection Julie Brill;
21. A design space for effective privacy notices Florian Schaub, Rebecca
Balebako, Adam L. Durity and Lorrie Faith Cranor; 22. Enter the
professionals: organizational privacy in the digital age J. Trevor Hughes
and Cobun Keegan; 23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, best
practices Mike Hintze; 24. Privacy versus research in big data Jane R.
Bambauer; 25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering
and innovation Courtney Bowman and John Grant; 26. The missing role of
economics in FTC privacy policy James Cooper and Joshua Wright; 27. Big
data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics Dale
Skivington, Lisa Zolidis and Brian P. O'Connor; 28. The future of
self-regulation is co-regulation Ira Rubenstein; 29. Privacy notices:
limitations, challenges, and opportunities Mary Culan and Paula Bruening;
30. It takes data to protect data David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo;
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible?
Adam Thierer; 32. Privacy after the agile turn Seda Gurses and Joris van
Hoboken.