ACM Policy 1998:
Washington,
DC,
USA
ACM Policy 1998,
The ethics and social impact component on Shaping policy in the information age,
May 10-12,
1998,
Washington,
DC,
USA,
Proceedings. ACM,
1998
- Gary T. Marx:
An ethics for the new surveillance (abstract).
1
- Jean-François Blanchette, Deborah G. Johnson:
Cryptography, data retention, and the panopticon society (abstract).
1-2
- Jonathan P. Allen:
Who shapes the future? problem framings and the development of handheld computers.
3-8
- Jeff Johnson:
CPSR's approach to advising policymakers.
9-13
- Leslie Regan Shade:
Developing guidelines within the Canadian ``knowledge-based economy/society''.
14-16
- Patricia Figliola Lewis:
The FCC's universal service rules (abstract): for schools and libraries.
17
- Richard S. Rosenberg:
Beyond the code of ethics: the responsibility of professional societies.
18-25
- Donald Gotterbarn:
Raising the bar: a software engineering code of ethics and professional practice.
26-28
- CORPORATE IEEE-CS-ACM Joint Task Force on Software Engineering Ethics: Software engineering code of ethics and professional practice (version 4).
29-32
- Jessica Clark:
Who profits? online copyright concerns for writers.
33-36
- Deborah G. Johnson, Keith Miller:
Anonymity, pseudonymity, or inescapable identity on the net (abstract).
37-38
- Daniel Lin, Michael C. Loui:
Taking the byte out of cookies: privacy, consent, and the Web.
39-51
- D. Primeaux:
Using an alternative ethical paradigm for analysis: an example regarding e-mail privacy issues.
52-55
- Florence Appel:
Including the social and ethical implications of computing in the computer science curriculum.
56-57
- David Preston:
What makes professionals so difficult: an investigation into professional ethics teaching.
58-67
- Tracy Camp:
Survey results from the incredible shrinking pipeline (abstract).
68
- Barry S. Fagin:
Liberty and community online.
69-78
- John Sullins:
Navigating the knowledge infrastructure: strategies for increasing workplace democracy and knowledge management (abstract).
79
- Jenny Shearer:
The campaign for an ethical Internet.
80-85
- Richard G. Epstein:
In-depth! The Silicon Valley Sentinel-Observer's public affairs NetTV program presents: toxic knowledge.
86-91
Copyright © Wed Nov 25 18:47:19 2009
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)