This article updates the traditional discussion of privacy and technology, focused since the days of Warren and Brandeis on the capacity of technology to manipulate information. It proposes a novel dimension to the impact of anthropomorphic or social design on privacy. Technologies designed to imitate people-through voice, animation, and natural language-are increasingly commonplace, showing up in our cars, computers, phones, and homes. A rich literature in communications and psychology suggests that we are hardwired to react to such technology as though a person were actually present. Social interfaces accordingly capture our attention, improve interactivity, and can free up our hands for other tasks. At the same time, technologies that im...
This article develops the concept for a technological solution to the problem of online privacy. Whi...
We present a strategy to privacy aimed at stimulating the adoption of privacy-preserving behaviours ...
With technological advancement, privacy has become a concept that is difficult to define, understand...
Privacy and technology issues tend to implicate one another. Sometimes they reinforce each other, s...
It is not an understatement that technology has dramatically altered virtually every aspect of our l...
Technological advances have created a new existence, providing an unforeseen level of interaction an...
Privacy is a complex concept involving dimensions of access and control of shared information, expec...
Online social media confound many of our familiar expectations about privacy. Contrary to popular my...
In the early twentieth century, it was still possible to be relatively anonymous at a large gatherin...
Much of Internet-related scholarship over the past ten years has focused on the enormous benefits th...
Can we live in a free society without personal privacy? The question is worth pondering, not only in...
In the 21st century, ubiquitous technologies strengthen ubiquitous surveillance. Although the right ...
The embodiment of the potential loss of privacy through a combination of artificial intelligence alg...
Transhuman enhancements—technologies that boost human capabilities—are everywhere: bodily implants, ...
This article investigates how to develop the tort of privacy to better address technology-facilitate...
This article develops the concept for a technological solution to the problem of online privacy. Whi...
We present a strategy to privacy aimed at stimulating the adoption of privacy-preserving behaviours ...
With technological advancement, privacy has become a concept that is difficult to define, understand...
Privacy and technology issues tend to implicate one another. Sometimes they reinforce each other, s...
It is not an understatement that technology has dramatically altered virtually every aspect of our l...
Technological advances have created a new existence, providing an unforeseen level of interaction an...
Privacy is a complex concept involving dimensions of access and control of shared information, expec...
Online social media confound many of our familiar expectations about privacy. Contrary to popular my...
In the early twentieth century, it was still possible to be relatively anonymous at a large gatherin...
Much of Internet-related scholarship over the past ten years has focused on the enormous benefits th...
Can we live in a free society without personal privacy? The question is worth pondering, not only in...
In the 21st century, ubiquitous technologies strengthen ubiquitous surveillance. Although the right ...
The embodiment of the potential loss of privacy through a combination of artificial intelligence alg...
Transhuman enhancements—technologies that boost human capabilities—are everywhere: bodily implants, ...
This article investigates how to develop the tort of privacy to better address technology-facilitate...
This article develops the concept for a technological solution to the problem of online privacy. Whi...
We present a strategy to privacy aimed at stimulating the adoption of privacy-preserving behaviours ...
With technological advancement, privacy has become a concept that is difficult to define, understand...