In this paper I will offer several arguments in support of the view that individuals have moral claims to control personal information. Coupled with rights to control access to one\u27s body, capacities, and powers, or physical privacy rights, we will have taken important steps toward a general right to privacy. In Part I, a definition of privacy is offered along with an account of the value of privacy. Simply put, privacy - defined as control over access to locations and information - is necessary for human well-being. In Part II, an attempt to move beyond claims of value to claims of obligation is presented and defended. Policies that sanction the capturing, storing, and trading of personal information about others is something we each ha...
As new technologies are introduced to the health care space, such as electronic health records and m...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
This Article is the text of the John A. Sibley Lecture delivered on March 2, 1978, at the University...
In this Article, I want to raise doubts about certain of Moore\u27s premises in his argument defendi...
In this Article, I consider the scope of this right to informational privacy relative to our interes...
Privacy, while rarely a major social concern before 1900, has recently become a high profile issue, ...
Privacy is a Janus-faced value. It enables us to shut the world out, but the forms it takes and the ...
This thesis concerns the ethics and political philosophy surrounding privacy. It investigates what ...
The purpose of this Article is to bring order to this theoretical chaos. In my view, none of these a...
This Article is the first in a series on the legal and sociological aspects of privacy, arguing that...
To say much of interest about a particular human right, we have to know its content. So we have to k...
There is an inherent tension between an individual’s desire to safeguard her personal information an...
this paper argues that people are entitled to keep some true facts about themselves to themselves, s...
In the United States, proposals for informational privacy have proved enormously controversial. On a...
Informational privacy is a matter of control; it consists in the ability to control when one’s perso...
As new technologies are introduced to the health care space, such as electronic health records and m...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
This Article is the text of the John A. Sibley Lecture delivered on March 2, 1978, at the University...
In this Article, I want to raise doubts about certain of Moore\u27s premises in his argument defendi...
In this Article, I consider the scope of this right to informational privacy relative to our interes...
Privacy, while rarely a major social concern before 1900, has recently become a high profile issue, ...
Privacy is a Janus-faced value. It enables us to shut the world out, but the forms it takes and the ...
This thesis concerns the ethics and political philosophy surrounding privacy. It investigates what ...
The purpose of this Article is to bring order to this theoretical chaos. In my view, none of these a...
This Article is the first in a series on the legal and sociological aspects of privacy, arguing that...
To say much of interest about a particular human right, we have to know its content. So we have to k...
There is an inherent tension between an individual’s desire to safeguard her personal information an...
this paper argues that people are entitled to keep some true facts about themselves to themselves, s...
In the United States, proposals for informational privacy have proved enormously controversial. On a...
Informational privacy is a matter of control; it consists in the ability to control when one’s perso...
As new technologies are introduced to the health care space, such as electronic health records and m...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
This Article is the text of the John A. Sibley Lecture delivered on March 2, 1978, at the University...