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Privacy, Due Process and the Computational Turn: The Philosophy of Law Meets the Philosophy of Technology

Edited by: Mireille Hildebrandt, Katja De Vries

ISBN13: 9780415831505
Published: January 2015
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2013)
Price: £46.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9780415644815



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Privacy, Due process and the Computational Turn: The Philosophy of Law Meets the Philosophy of Technology engages with the rapidly developing computational aspects of our world including data mining, behavioural advertising, iGovernment, profiling for intelligence, customer relationship management, smart search engines, personalized news feeds, and so on in order to consider their implications for the assumptions on which our legal framework has been built. The contributions to this volume focus on the issue of privacy, which is often equated with data privacy and data security, location privacy, anonymity, pseudonymity, unobservability, and unlinkability. Here, however, the extent to which predictive and other types of data analytics operate in ways that may or may not violate privacy is rigorously taken up, both technologically and legally, in order to open up new possibilities for considering, and contesting, how we are increasingly being correlated and categorizedin relationship with due process - the right to contest how the profiling systems are categorizing and deciding about us.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence, Data Protection, IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
Chapter 1: Privacy, Due Process and the Computational Turn A parable and a first analysis, Katja de Vries
Chapter 2: A Machine Learning View on Profiling Martijn van Otterlo
Chapter 3: Abducing Personal Data, Destroying Privacy, Diagnosing Profiles through Artifactual Mediators, lorenzo Magnani
Chapter 5: Digital prophecies and web intelligence, Elena Esposito
Chapter 6: The end(s) of critique : data-behaviourism vs. due-process, Antoinette Rouvroy*
Chapter 7: Political and Ethical Perspectives on Data Obfuscation, Finn Brunton and Helen Nissenbaum
Chapter 8: On decision transparency, Or how to enhance data protection after the computational turn, Bert-Jaap Koops
Chapter 9: Profile transparency by design? Re-enabling double contingency, Mireille Hildebrandt