Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Jin Yan reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk featuring Jamie Bartlett, author of the book Dark Net and Director of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media. In his talk, Bartlett addressed three difficult moral questions raised by the anonymous, untraceable ‘dark net’: online drug markets, online political extremists and pro-anorexia fora. Should internet regulation touch upon these hidden online communities or should we leave them free
The Internet was born in 1960’s, then Internet ethics appeared as a branch of information ethics. It...
This article is about resources, which can open access to illegal systems of the World Internet spac...
“If it turns out that the Internet does help to stifle dissent, amplify existing inequalities in ter...
Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Jessica Di Paolo reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk feat...
This report on a lecture at the LSE by Evgeny Morozov is by POLIS intern, Beth Lowell
The ‘‘dark web” is a part of cyberspace that is only accessible through an anonymity software, such ...
Raphael Cohen-Almagor, the author of Confronting the Internet’s Dark Side, explains his motivation f...
The Dark Net aims to examine the most innovative and dangerous online subcultures: trolls and pornog...
On November 15, 2018 the Canadian Association for Security and Intelligence Studies (CASIS) Vancouve...
The dark web is notorious for the illicit activities it facilitates, including human trafficking, na...
The Internet—home to ‘cyber mobs’, liars, aggressive misogynists and purveyors of hate, who distribu...
© Raphael Cohen-Almagor 2015. Terrorism, cyberbullying, child pornography, hate speech, cybercrime: ...
Beyond the Internet as most of us know it is the Dark Net. This virtual space, accessed only by down...
The meteoric rise of social networks and micro-blogging platforms raises important new ethical and p...
Governments have traditionally censored drug-related information, both in traditional media and, in ...
The Internet was born in 1960’s, then Internet ethics appeared as a branch of information ethics. It...
This article is about resources, which can open access to illegal systems of the World Internet spac...
“If it turns out that the Internet does help to stifle dissent, amplify existing inequalities in ter...
Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Jessica Di Paolo reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk feat...
This report on a lecture at the LSE by Evgeny Morozov is by POLIS intern, Beth Lowell
The ‘‘dark web” is a part of cyberspace that is only accessible through an anonymity software, such ...
Raphael Cohen-Almagor, the author of Confronting the Internet’s Dark Side, explains his motivation f...
The Dark Net aims to examine the most innovative and dangerous online subcultures: trolls and pornog...
On November 15, 2018 the Canadian Association for Security and Intelligence Studies (CASIS) Vancouve...
The dark web is notorious for the illicit activities it facilitates, including human trafficking, na...
The Internet—home to ‘cyber mobs’, liars, aggressive misogynists and purveyors of hate, who distribu...
© Raphael Cohen-Almagor 2015. Terrorism, cyberbullying, child pornography, hate speech, cybercrime: ...
Beyond the Internet as most of us know it is the Dark Net. This virtual space, accessed only by down...
The meteoric rise of social networks and micro-blogging platforms raises important new ethical and p...
Governments have traditionally censored drug-related information, both in traditional media and, in ...
The Internet was born in 1960’s, then Internet ethics appeared as a branch of information ethics. It...
This article is about resources, which can open access to illegal systems of the World Internet spac...
“If it turns out that the Internet does help to stifle dissent, amplify existing inequalities in ter...