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Ethics and Information Technology, Volume 18
Volume 18, Number 1, March 2016
- Bart van der Sloot:

Introduction. 1-7 - Marjolein Lanzing

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The transparent self. 9-16 - Jacquelyn Ann Burkell

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Remembering me: big data, individual identity, and the psychological necessity of forgetting. 17-23 - Marijn Sax:

Big data: Finders keepers, losers weepers? 25-31 - Titus Stahl

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Indiscriminate mass surveillance and the public sphere. 33-39 - Adam D. Moore:

Privacy, speech, and values: what we have no business knowing. 41-49 - Jens-Erik Mai

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Personal information as communicative acts. 51-57 - Marc-André Weber

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Privacy: an institutional fact. 59-64
Volume 18, Number 2, June 2016
- Sofia Kaliarnta:

Using Aristotle's theory of friendship to classify online friendships: a critical counterview. 65-79 - Anna Margulis, Harold Boeck

, Ygal Bendavid, Fabien Durif
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Building theory from consumer reactions to RFID: discovering Connective Proximity. 81-101 - Thomas Arnold, Matthias Scheutz

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Against the moral Turing test: accountable design and the moral reasoning of autonomous systems. 103-115 - Marcello Ienca

, Pim Haselager
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Hacking the brain: brain-computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity. 117-129 - Paul B. de Laat:

Profiling vandalism in Wikipedia: A Schauerian approach to justification. 131-148 - Amitai Etzioni, Oren Etzioni:

AI assisted ethics. 149-156 - Tae Wan Kim, Kevin Werbach

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More than just a game: ethical issues in gamification. 157-173
Volume 18, Number 3, September 2016
- Katleen Gabriels

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'I keep a close watch on this child of mine': a moral critique of other-tracking apps. 175-184 - Oliver K. Burmeister

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The development of assistive dementia technology that accounts for the values of those affected by its use. 185-198 - David M. Douglas

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Doxing: a conceptual analysis. 199-210 - Paul Formosa

, Malcolm Ryan
, Dan Staines
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Papers, Please and the systemic approach to engaging ethical expertise in videogames. 211-225 - Patrick Chisan Hew:

Preserving a combat commander's moral agency: The Vincennes Incident as a Chinese Room. 227-235 - Tony Doyle:

Finn Brunton and Helen Nissenbaum: Obfuscation: a user's guide for privacy and protest. 237-239
Volume 18, Number 4, December 2016
- Raffaele Rodogno

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Ethics and social robotics. 241-242 - Bertram F. Malle

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Integrating robot ethics and machine morality: the study and design of moral competence in robots. 243-256 - Raffaele Rodogno:

Social robots, fiction, and sentimentality. 257-268 - Niklas Toivakainen

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Machines and the face of ethics. 269-282 - Amanda J. C. Sharkey:

Should we welcome robot teachers? 283-297 - John Danaher

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Robots, law and the retribution gap. 299-309 - Aimee van Wynsberghe:

Service robots, care ethics, and design. 311-321

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