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Table of Contents
Cover
Front Matter
Half title
Title page
Copyright information
Contents
Series Editors' Introduction
Chapter Int-null
Introduction: Ethical Hacking and Hacking Ethics
Chapter One The Exploit
1.1 We Do What We Are and Not What We Ought to Do
1.2 Systems Theory
1.2.1 Principles of Systemic Order
1.2.2 Communication
1.2.3 Consequences of Luhmann's Theory of Communication for Morality and Ethics
1.2.4 Cognitive and Normative Expectations and the Problem of Double Contingency
1.2.5 Symbolically Generalized Media and Functional Differentiation
1.2.6 Consequences of Functional Differentiation
1.2.7 The Function of Morality in Modern Society
1.2.8 Can Society as a Whole Be Modeled as a System?
1.2.9 What Is the Status of Social Theory?
1.3 Actor-Network Theory
1.3.1 The Difference a Stone Makes
1.3.2 Information
Chapter Two The Breach
2.1 The Philosophical Mythology of Humanism
2.1.1 The Philosophy of Information and Information Ethics
2.1.2 What Is Information?
2.1.3 Information Ethics
2.1.4 The Informational Self
2.1.5 Privacy
2.2 Social Science Critique
2.2.1 The Modern Constitution
2.2.2 Critique
2.2.3 Platform Society
2.2.3.1 Datafication
2.2.3.2 Commodification
2.2.3.3 Selection
2.2.4 Surveillance Capitalism
2.3 Media Scandalization
2.4 Civil Society Activism
Chapter Three The Redesign
3.1 Network Norms
3.1.1 Connectivity
3.1.2 Flow
3.1.3 Communication
3.1.4 Participation
3.1.5 Transparency
3.1.6 Authenticity
3.1.7 Flexibility
3.2 Network Governance
3.2.1 The Three Disruptions
3.2.2 Governance
3.3 Design
3.3.1 Attribution of Moral Agency and Responsibility
3.3.2 Case Study: Google's Framework for Internal Algorithmic Auditing
3.3.3 What Is Design?
3.4 Digital Ethics.
End Matter
Bibliography
Index.
Front Matter
Half title
Title page
Copyright information
Contents
Series Editors' Introduction
Chapter Int-null
Introduction: Ethical Hacking and Hacking Ethics
Chapter One The Exploit
1.1 We Do What We Are and Not What We Ought to Do
1.2 Systems Theory
1.2.1 Principles of Systemic Order
1.2.2 Communication
1.2.3 Consequences of Luhmann's Theory of Communication for Morality and Ethics
1.2.4 Cognitive and Normative Expectations and the Problem of Double Contingency
1.2.5 Symbolically Generalized Media and Functional Differentiation
1.2.6 Consequences of Functional Differentiation
1.2.7 The Function of Morality in Modern Society
1.2.8 Can Society as a Whole Be Modeled as a System?
1.2.9 What Is the Status of Social Theory?
1.3 Actor-Network Theory
1.3.1 The Difference a Stone Makes
1.3.2 Information
Chapter Two The Breach
2.1 The Philosophical Mythology of Humanism
2.1.1 The Philosophy of Information and Information Ethics
2.1.2 What Is Information?
2.1.3 Information Ethics
2.1.4 The Informational Self
2.1.5 Privacy
2.2 Social Science Critique
2.2.1 The Modern Constitution
2.2.2 Critique
2.2.3 Platform Society
2.2.3.1 Datafication
2.2.3.2 Commodification
2.2.3.3 Selection
2.2.4 Surveillance Capitalism
2.3 Media Scandalization
2.4 Civil Society Activism
Chapter Three The Redesign
3.1 Network Norms
3.1.1 Connectivity
3.1.2 Flow
3.1.3 Communication
3.1.4 Participation
3.1.5 Transparency
3.1.6 Authenticity
3.1.7 Flexibility
3.2 Network Governance
3.2.1 The Three Disruptions
3.2.2 Governance
3.3 Design
3.3.1 Attribution of Moral Agency and Responsibility
3.3.2 Case Study: Google's Framework for Internal Algorithmic Auditing
3.3.3 What Is Design?
3.4 Digital Ethics.
End Matter
Bibliography
Index.