The Cambridge handbook of consumer privacy / edited by Evan Selinger, Jules Polonetsky, Omer Tene.
2018
K3842 .C36 2018 (Mapit)
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Details
Title
The Cambridge handbook of consumer privacy / edited by Evan Selinger, Jules Polonetsky, Omer Tene.
Added Author
Imprint
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Copyright
©2018.
Description
xi, 601 pages : illustrations ; 27 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Pt. 1. Introduction. 1. Consumer privacy and the future of society / Jules Polonetsky, Omer Tene, and Evan Selinger
Pt. 2. The pervasiveness and value of tracking technologies. 2. Data brokers: should they be reviled or revered? / Jennifer Barrett Glasgow
3. In defense of big data analysics / Mark MacCarthy
4. Education technology and student privacy / Elana Zeide
5. Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices / Kristin Martin and Katie Shilton
6. Face recognition, real time identification, and beyond / Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer
7. Smart cities: privacy, transparency, and community / Kelsey Finch and Omer Tene
Part 3. Ethical and legal reservations about tracking technologies. 8. Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg national surveys in perspective / Joseph Turow
9. The federal Trade Commission's inner privacy struggle / Chris Jay Hoofnagle
10. Privacy and human behavior in the information age / Alessandro Acquisti, Laura Brandimarte, and George Lowenstein
11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordance / Ryan Calo
12. Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their customers / Michelle N. Meyer
13. Algorithmic discrimiation vs. privacy law / Alvaro N. Bedoya
14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities / Stephen Balkam
15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not track / Aleecia M. McDonald
16. Applying ethics when using data beyond individuals' understanding / Martin E. Abrams and Lynn A. Goldstein
Pt. 4. International perspectives. 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to data protection / Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm
18. Privacy, freedom of expression, the the right to be forgotten in Europe / Stefan Kulik and Frederik Zuiderveen Boresius
19. Understanding the balancing act behind the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach / Irene Kamara and Paul de Hert
Part 5. New approaches to improve the status quo. 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection / Julie Brill
21. A design space for effective privacy notices / Florian Schaub, Rebecca Balebako, Adam L Durity, and Lorrie Faith Cranor
22. Enter the professionals: organizational privacy in a digital age / J. Trevor Hughes and Cobun Keegam
23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, and best practices / Mike Hintze
24. Privacy versus research in big data / Jane R. Bambauer
25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering and innovation / Courtney Bowman and John Grant
26. The missing role of economics in FTC privacy policy / James C. Cooper and Joshua Wright
27. Big data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics / Dale Skivington, Lisa Zolidas and Brian P. O'Connor
28. The future of self-regulation is co-regulation / Ira S. Rubenstein
29. Privacy notices: limitations, challenges, and opportunities / Mary J. Culnan and Paula J. Bruening
30. It takes datat to protect data / David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible? / Adam Thierer
32. Privacy after the agile Turn / Seda Gürses and Joris van Hoboken.
Pt. 2. The pervasiveness and value of tracking technologies. 2. Data brokers: should they be reviled or revered? / Jennifer Barrett Glasgow
3. In defense of big data analysics / Mark MacCarthy
4. Education technology and student privacy / Elana Zeide
5. Mobile privacy expectations: how privacy is respected in mobile devices / Kristin Martin and Katie Shilton
6. Face recognition, real time identification, and beyond / Yana Welinder and Aeryn Palmer
7. Smart cities: privacy, transparency, and community / Kelsey Finch and Omer Tene
Part 3. Ethical and legal reservations about tracking technologies. 8. Americans and marketplace privacy: seven Annenberg national surveys in perspective / Joseph Turow
9. The federal Trade Commission's inner privacy struggle / Chris Jay Hoofnagle
10. Privacy and human behavior in the information age / Alessandro Acquisti, Laura Brandimarte, and George Lowenstein
11. Privacy, vulnerability, and affordance / Ryan Calo
12. Ethical considerations when companies study - and fail to study - their customers / Michelle N. Meyer
13. Algorithmic discrimiation vs. privacy law / Alvaro N. Bedoya
14. Children, privacy, and the new online realities / Stephen Balkam
15. Stakeholders and high stakes: divergent standards for do not track / Aleecia M. McDonald
16. Applying ethics when using data beyond individuals' understanding / Martin E. Abrams and Lynn A. Goldstein
Pt. 4. International perspectives. 17. Profiling and the essence of the right to data protection / Bilyana Petkova and Franziska Boehm
18. Privacy, freedom of expression, the the right to be forgotten in Europe / Stefan Kulik and Frederik Zuiderveen Boresius
19. Understanding the balancing act behind the legitimate interest of the controller ground: a pragmatic approach / Irene Kamara and Paul de Hert
Part 5. New approaches to improve the status quo. 20. The intersection of privacy and consumer protection / Julie Brill
21. A design space for effective privacy notices / Florian Schaub, Rebecca Balebako, Adam L Durity, and Lorrie Faith Cranor
22. Enter the professionals: organizational privacy in a digital age / J. Trevor Hughes and Cobun Keegam
23. Privacy statements: purposes, requirements, and best practices / Mike Hintze
24. Privacy versus research in big data / Jane R. Bambauer
25. A marketplace for privacy: incentives for privacy engineering and innovation / Courtney Bowman and John Grant
26. The missing role of economics in FTC privacy policy / James C. Cooper and Joshua Wright
27. Big data by design: establishing privacy governance by analytics / Dale Skivington, Lisa Zolidas and Brian P. O'Connor
28. The future of self-regulation is co-regulation / Ira S. Rubenstein
29. Privacy notices: limitations, challenges, and opportunities / Mary J. Culnan and Paula J. Bruening
30. It takes datat to protect data / David A. Hoffman and Patricia A. Rimo
31. Are benefit-cost analysis and privacy protection efforts incompatible? / Adam Thierer
32. Privacy after the agile Turn / Seda Gürses and Joris van Hoboken.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Location
STA
Call Number
K3842 .C36 2018
Language
English
ISBN
9781107181106 (hardcover alkaline paper)
1107181100 (hardcover alkaline paper)
1107181100 (hardcover alkaline paper)
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