Online Public Access Catalogue

Privacy and Technologies of Identity (Record no. 12190)

MARC details
020 ## -
-- 9780387282220
-- 978-0-387-28222-0
024 7# -
-- 10.1007/0-387-28222-X
-- doi
050 #4 -
-- QA76.9.C66
072 #7 -
-- UBJ
-- bicssc
072 #7 -
-- COM079000
-- bisacsh
082 04 -
-- 004
-- 23
100 1# -
-- Strandburg, Katherine J.
-- editor.
245 10 -
-- Privacy and Technologies of Identity
-- [electronic resource] :
-- A Cross-Disciplinary Conversation /
-- edited by Katherine J. Strandburg, Daniela Stan Raicu.
264 #1 -
-- Boston, MA :
-- Springer US,
-- 2006.
300 ## -
-- XV, 383 p.
-- online resource.
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-- text
-- txt
-- rdacontent
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-- computer
-- c
-- rdamedia
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-- online resource
-- cr
-- rdacarrier
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-- text file
-- PDF
-- rda
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-- Introductory Issues in Privacy and Technology -- The Digital Person and the Future of Privacy -- Privacy and Rationality -- Social Norms, Self Control, and Privacy in the Online World -- Privacy Implications of RFID and Location Tracking -- Rfid Privacy -- Geolocation and Locational Privacy -- Privacy Inalienability and Personal Data Chips -- Privacy Implications of Biometric Technologies -- Biometrics -- Biometrics: Applications, Challenges and the Future -- Constructing Policy -- Finding Waldo -- Privacy Implications of Data Mining and Targeted Marketing -- Data Mining and Privacy: An Overview -- Online Privacy, Tailoring, and Persuasion -- Data Mining and Attention Consumption -- Is Privacy Regulation the Environmental Law of the Information Age? -- Document Sanitization in the Age of Data Mining -- Implications of Technology for Anonymity and Identification -- Nymity, P2P & Isps -- Fourth Amendment Limits on National Identity Cards -- Privacy Issues in an Electronic Voting Machine -- Hidden-Web Privacy Preservation Surfing (Hi-Wepps) Model -- Global Disclosure Risk for Microdata with Continuous Attributes.
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-- Privacy and Technologies of Identity: A Cross-Disciplinary Conversation provides an overview of ways in which technological changes raise privacy concerns. It then addresses four major areas of technology: RFID and location tracking technology; biometric technology, data mining; and issues with anonymity and authentication of identity. Many of the chapters are written with the non-specialist in mind, seeking to educate a diverse audience on the "basics" of the technology and the law and to point out the promise and perils of each technology for privacy. The material in this book provides an interface between legal and policy approaches to privacy and technologies that either threaten or enhance privacy. This book grew out of the Fall 2004 CIPLIT(r) Symposium on Privacy and Identity: The Promise and Perils of a Technological Age, co-sponsored by DePaul University's College of Law and School of Computer Science, Telecommunications and Information Systems. The Symposium brought together leading researchers in advanced technology and leading thinkers from the law and policy arenas, many of whom have contributed chapters to the book. Like the Symposium, the book seeks to contribute to a conversation among technologists, lawyers, and policymakers about how best to handle the challenges to privacy that arise from recent technological advances.
650 #0 -
-- Computer science.
650 #0 -
-- Information systems.
650 14 -
-- Computer Science.
650 24 -
-- Computers and Society.
650 24 -
-- Signal, Image and Speech Processing.
650 24 -
-- Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet).
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-- User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
650 24 -
-- Information Systems and Communication Service.
700 1# -
-- Raicu, Daniela Stan.
-- editor.
710 2# -
-- SpringerLink (Online service)
773 0# -
-- Springer eBooks
776 08 -
-- Printed edition:
-- 9780387260501
856 40 -
-- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-387-28222-X
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-- ZDB-2-SCS
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-- Computer Science (Springer-11645)
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-- 12190
-- 12190

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