Jeremy Bentham’s panoptic prison design and its underlying implications, with Michel Foucault’s interpretation, turned into a new concept that refers to controlling power. Now, the panopticon is used as a synonym of surveillance. The analogy of the panopticon is often used to imply the problems of surveillance and its ethical implications in social media. This thesis aims to research how the panoptic prison has changed and transformed 21st century information technologies by analyzing people’s behaviors and attitudes in social media channels and argues that computer ethics is an important subject matter to understand the unforeseen impact of Information Technologies on individuals and society.M.S. - Master of Scienc
The paper analyses the concept of panopticism formulated in Foucault’s works and its possibilities o...
Surveillance is a growing issue today, especially so with the growth of technology and the unlimited...
Based on Jeremy Bentham's panopticon design (1785) as the architectural manifestation of surveillan...
The objective of this paper is to revisit the metaphor of the Panopticon, borrowed by Michel Foucaul...
In the 21st century it is impossible to avoid surveillance with coming of advanced technology. In my...
Nineteenth Century philosopher Jeremy Bentham designed a prison system known as the Panopticon which...
Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon prison project was based on three central assumptions: the omnipresence ...
This paper questions the use of new technologies as tools of modern surveillance in order to: (a) ad...
A panopticon—the ideal mechanism for surveillance and control—has become embedded in our smartphones...
The main aim of this diploma thesis is analysis of power, surveillance and control in today's societ...
The purpose of this paper is to explore ethical issues arising from the mass deployment and take-up ...
The article addresses the problem of surveillance within the framework of ethical information policy...
This project explores the Prisoners of the Planetary Panopticon. Surveillance no longer exists solel...
Foucault, in his seminal work Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (1975) discusses Bentha...
Morals reformed… by a simple idea in Architecture! … A new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind...
The paper analyses the concept of panopticism formulated in Foucault’s works and its possibilities o...
Surveillance is a growing issue today, especially so with the growth of technology and the unlimited...
Based on Jeremy Bentham's panopticon design (1785) as the architectural manifestation of surveillan...
The objective of this paper is to revisit the metaphor of the Panopticon, borrowed by Michel Foucaul...
In the 21st century it is impossible to avoid surveillance with coming of advanced technology. In my...
Nineteenth Century philosopher Jeremy Bentham designed a prison system known as the Panopticon which...
Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon prison project was based on three central assumptions: the omnipresence ...
This paper questions the use of new technologies as tools of modern surveillance in order to: (a) ad...
A panopticon—the ideal mechanism for surveillance and control—has become embedded in our smartphones...
The main aim of this diploma thesis is analysis of power, surveillance and control in today's societ...
The purpose of this paper is to explore ethical issues arising from the mass deployment and take-up ...
The article addresses the problem of surveillance within the framework of ethical information policy...
This project explores the Prisoners of the Planetary Panopticon. Surveillance no longer exists solel...
Foucault, in his seminal work Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (1975) discusses Bentha...
Morals reformed… by a simple idea in Architecture! … A new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind...
The paper analyses the concept of panopticism formulated in Foucault’s works and its possibilities o...
Surveillance is a growing issue today, especially so with the growth of technology and the unlimited...
Based on Jeremy Bentham's panopticon design (1785) as the architectural manifestation of surveillan...