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Ethics and Information Technology, Volume 19
Volume 19, Number 1, March 2017
- Migle Laukyte:
Artificial agents among us: Should we recognize them as agents proper? 1-17 - Martin Mose Bentzen:
Black boxes on wheels: research challenges and ethical problems in MEA-based robotics. 19-28 - Katharyn Hogan:
Is the machine question the same question as the animal question? 29-38 - Mario Pascalev:
Privacy exchanges: restoring consent in privacy self-management. 39-48 - Heather Draper, Tom Sorell:
Ethical values and social care robots for older people: an international qualitative study. 49-68 - Gregory J. Robson:
The threat of comprehensive overstimulation in modern societies. 69-80
Volume 19, Number 2, June 2017
- Christian Klemm, Wolter Pieters:
Game mechanics and technological mediation: an ethical perspective on the effects of MMORPG's. 81-93 - Michael Goerger:
Value, violence, and the ethics of gaming. 95-105 - Derek Leben:
A Rawlsian algorithm for autonomous vehicles. 107-115 - Sebastian Ostritsch:
The amoralist challenge to gaming and the gamer's moral obligation. 117-128 - J. C. Buitelaar:
Post-mortem privacy and informational self-determination. 129-142 - Christian Pentzold:
'What are these researchers doing in my Wikipedia?': ethical premises and practical judgment in internet-based ethnography. 143-155
Volume 19, Number 3, September 2017
- Brent D. Mittelstadt:
Ethics of the health-related internet of things: a narrative review. 157-175 - Alice E. Marwick:
Scandal or sex crime? Gendered privacy and the celebrity nude photo leaks. 177-191 - Hin-Yan Liu:
Irresponsibilities, inequalities and injustice for autonomous vehicles. 193-207 - Garry Young:
Objections to Ostritsch's argument in "The amoralist challenge to gaming and the gamer's moral obligation". 209-219 - Jeff Buechner:
"Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?". 221-236 - Ryan Dennison:
Gary Young, Resolving the gamer's dilemma: examining the moral and psychological differences between virtual murder and virtual paedophilia. 237-239
Volume 19, Number 4, December 2017
- Pieter E. Vermaas:
The societal impact of the emerging quantum technologies: a renewed urgency to make quantum theory understandable. 241-246 - David P. DiVincenzo:
Scientists and citizens: getting to quantum technologies. 247-251 - Matthias Möller, Cornelis Vuik:
On the impact of quantum computing technology on future developments in high-performance scientific computing. 253-269 - Ronald de Wolf:
The potential impact of quantum computers on society. 271-276 - Christopher Coenen, Armin Grunwald:
Responsible research and innovation (RRI) in quantum technology. 277-294 - Alexei Grinbaum:
Narratives of quantum theory in the age of quantum technologies. 295-306
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