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Ethics and Information Technology, Volume 27
Volume 27, Number 1, March 2025
- Marie Christin Decker

, Laila Wegner
, Carmen Leicht-Scholten
:
Procedural fairness in algorithmic decision-making: the role of public engagement. 1 - Pablo Muruzábal Lamberti

, Gunter Bombaerts
, Wijnand A. IJsselsteijn
:
Mind the gap: bridging the divide between computer scientists and ethicists in shaping moral machines. 2 - Thomas Montefiore

, Morgan Luck
:
Correction: The repugnant resolution: has Coghlan & Cox resolved the Gamer's Dilemma? 3 - Javier Argota Sánchez-Vaquerizo

:
Urban Digital Twins and metaverses towards city multiplicities: uniting or dividing urban experiences? 4 - Luca Nannini

, Diletta Huyskes
, Enrico Panai, Giada Pistilli, Alessio Tartaro
:
Nullius in Explanans: an ethical risk assessment for explainable AI. 5 - Joost Mollen

:
LLMs beyond the lab: the ethics and epistemics of real-world AI research. 6 - Huzeyfe Demirtas

:
AI responsibility gap: not new, inevitable, unproblematic. 7 - Johannes Müller-Salo

:
Leading good digital lives. 8 - Guoyu Wang

, Wei Wang, Yiqin Cao, Yan Teng, Qianyu Guo, Haofen Wang
, Junyu Lin, Jiajie Ma, Jin Liu, Yingchun Wang:
Possibilities and challenges in the moral growth of large language models: a philosophical perspective. 9 - Seumas Miller

:
Robots, institutional roles and joint action: some key ethical issues. 10 - Martin Beckstein

, Bouke De Vries:
Dating apps as tools for social engineering. 11 - Zacharus Gudmunsen:

Designing responsible agents. 12 - Daniel Grasso

:
Disembodied friendship: virtual friends and the tendencies of technologically mediated friendship. 13 - Herman Veluwenkamp

:
What responsibility gaps are and what they should be. 14 - Kristian Gonzalez Barman, Nathan Gabriel Wood, Pawel Pawlowski:

Correction: Beyond transparency and explainability: on the need for adequate and contextualized user guidelines for LLM use. 15 - Vageesh Saxena, Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux, Gijs van Dijck

, Gerasimos Spanakis
:
Responsible guidelines for authorship attribution tasks in NLP. 16
Volume 27, Number 2, June 2025
- Tim Christiaens

:
Trust and power in Airbnb's digital rating and reputation system. 18 - Michael Hemmingsen:

Act consequentialism and the gamer's dilemma. 19 - Teresa Hammerschmidt

:
Navigating the Nexus of ethical standards and moral values. 17 - Joshua Hatherley

:
A moving target in AI-assisted decision-making: dataset shift, model updating, and the problem of update opacity. 20 - Niël H. Conradie, Saskia K. Nagel:

Taking responsibility for the outcomes of autonomous technologies. 21 - Samantha L. Seybold:

Voter deterrence campaigns and the moral-epistemic landscape of political microtargeting. 22 - David J. Gunkel, Simon Coghlan:

Cut the crap: a critical response to "ChatGPT is bullshit". 23 - Kinfe Yilma

:
Ethics of AI in Africa: Interrogating the role of Ubuntu and AI governance initiatives. 24 - Daniela Vacek:

Meeting the AI achievement challenge: collective and vicarious achievements. 25 - Ana Paula Gonzalez Torres

, Timo Ali-Vehmas
:
AI regulation: maintaining interoperability through value-sensitive standardisation. 26 - Christopher Nathan

, Irma Põder
:
Towards a comprehensive framework for ethical and responsible standardisation. 27 - Adam Dahlgren Lindström, Leila Methnani, Lea Krause, Petter Ericson, Íñigo Martinez de Rituerto de Troya

, Dimitri Coelho Mollo, Roel Dobbe:
Helpful, harmless, honest? Sociotechnical limits of AI alignment and safety through Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback. 28 - Emmie Malone, Saleh Afroogh

, Jason D'Cruz, Kush R. Varshney:
When trust is zero sum: automation's threat to epistemic agency. 29 - Luca M. Possati

, Pieter Vermaas:
The rationality and morality of connecting quantum computers. 30 - Alexander Skulmowski

, Patricia Engel-Hermann
:
The ethics of erroneous AI-generated scientific figures. 31
Volume 27, Number 3, September 2025
- Florian Van Daalen

, Marine Jacquemin
, Johan van Soest
, Nina Stahl, David Townend, Andre Dekker, Iñigo Bermejo
:
A critique of current approaches to privacy in machine learning. 32 - Annelien Smets

:
Intended, afforded, and experienced serendipity: overcoming the paradox of artificial serendipity. 33 - Dirk Lukkien, Henk Herman Nap

, Alexander Peine
, Mirella M. Minkman, Ellen H. M. Moors, Wouter P. C. Boon:
Responsible scaling of artificial intelligence in healthcare: standardization meets customization. 34 - Philip Robbins

:
Of machines and men: Attributions of moral responsibility in AI-assisted warfare. 35 - Ihor Rudko, Aysan Bashirpour Bonab:

ChatGPT is incredible (at being average). 36 - Michael J. Ardoline, Edward Lenzo:

The cognitive and moral harms of platform decay. 37 - Kestutis Mosakas

, Vladislav Fomin, Hristina Veljanova, Barbara Reiter, Elisabeth Staudegger, David Bierbauer, Oksana Kuzmuk:
Bringing values to standardisation: from policy concepts to a value-based framework for education about standardisation. 38 - Maciej Marek Zajac

:
Autonomous weapon systems impact on incidence of armed conflict: rejecting the 'lower threshold for war argument'. 39 - Maria Danielsen

, Sabine Roeser
:
Why emotions and works of art are pertinent to the assessment of the ethical risks of AI. 40 - Khoa Nguyen-Viet

:
Navigating personal name avoidance in artificial intelligence: challenges, adaptations, and ethical considerations. 41 - Joseph Vukov, Gina Lebkuecher

, Tera Joseph, Elena Maria Martinez, Michelle Ramirez, Michael B. Burns:
The Ouroboros effect and heterodox domains. 42 - Martijn Wiarda

, Kalli Giannelos
, Geerten van de Kaa:
An editorial on responsible standardisation: where responsible innovation and standardisation meet. 43 - Julian W. März

, Matthias Baumgartner, Nenad Blau, Nikola Biller-Andorno:
Digital twins for children with rare diseases: an exploration of the legal and ethical issues. 44
Volume 27, Number 4, December 2025
- Alessandro Volpe

:
Toward an artificial deliberation? On Google DeepMind's Habermas Machine. 45 - Josep Domingo-Ferrer:

Symbolic cryptoviolence in on-line social networks. 46 - Pelin Kasar

:
There is a problem, but not a responsibility gap. 47 - Herwin Meerveld

, Lonneke Peperkamp, Marie Safár Postma
, Roy Lindelauf
:
Operationalising responsible AI in the military domain: a context-specific assessment. 48 - Henning Lahmann, Bart Custers

, Benjamyn I. Scott:
The fundamental rights risks of countering cognitive warfare with artificial intelligence. 49 - Ingvild Bode

, Anna Nadibaidze
, Tom F. A. Watts, Qiaochu Zhang:
Ensuring the exercise of human agency in AI-based military systems: concerns across the lifecycle. 50 - Ariel Conn, Ingvild Bode

:
Establishing human responsibility and accountability at early stages of the lifecycle for AI-based defence systems. 51 - Andrew West, Claudio Novelli, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:

Recommender systems as commercial speech: A framing for US legislation. 52 - Michael Haiden

, Florian Richter:
Autonomous weapons: considering the rights and interests of soldiers. 53 - Carlos Saura García

:
Synthetification of public opinion: impacts on deliberative democracies. 54 - Denise Garcia:

The global diplomacy of governing military artificial intelligence. 55 - Mark Coeckelbergh:

Politiquette: Liberalism, identity, and free speech on AI-powered digital social media. 56 - Ryan Gary Timms

:
All 'Dark patterns' Are 'Hostile patterns': A Hostility Framework for Understanding Problematic Digital Interfaces. 57 - Andrew J. Routledge:

Has the world gone botshit crazy? A response to the Frankfurtian critique of ChatGPT in higher education. 58 - Atay Kozlovski

:
Reasons underdetermination in meaningful human control. 59 - Eike Buhr, Orhan Onder

, Pranab Rudra, Frank Ursin:
Trust and Artificial Intelligence in the Doctor-Patient Relationship: Epistemological Preconditions and Reliability Gaps. 60 - Adam Poulsen, Ian B. Hickie, Min K. Chong, Haley M. LaMonica, Ashlee Turner

, Frank Iorfino:
Personalised care, youth mental health, and digital technology: A value sensitive design perspective and framework. 61 - Chris Bousquet

:
Limiting the right to moderate: political equality, social media, and viewpoint-based moderation. 62 - Seumas Miller

:
Lethal autonomous weapon systems (LAWS): meaningful human Control, collective moral responsibility and institutional design. 63 - Anja Bodenschatz

:
Navigating the social dilemma of autonomous systems: normative and applied arguments. 64 - Tijs Portegies, Oumaima Hajri, Lotte M. Willemsen, Maaike Harbers:

Decoding AI ethics: What do ethical tools tell us about ethics? 65 - Robert Atkinson:

Cognitive sovereignty and neurocomputational harm in predictive digital platforms. 66

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