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Privacy and Identity Management. Facing up to Next Steps - 11th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG 9.2.2 International Summer School, Karlstad, Sweden, August 21-26, 2016, Revised Selected Papers (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
Anja Lehmann, Diane Whitehouse, Simone Fischer-Hubner, Lothar Fritsch, Charles Raab
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R2,339
Discovery Miles 23 390
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book contains a range of invited and submitted papers
presented at the 11th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG
9.2.2 International Summer School, held in Karlstad, Sweden, in
August 2016. The 17 revised full papers and one short paper
included in this volume were carefully selected from a total of 42
submissions and were subject to a two-step review process. The
papers combine interdisciplinary approaches to bring together a
host of perspectives: technical, legal, regulatory, socio-economic,
social, societal, political, ethical, anthropological,
philosophical, and psychological. The paper 'Big Data Privacy and
Anonymization' is published open access under a CC BY 4.0 license
at link.springer.com.
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Privacy and Identity Management. Time for a Revolution? - 10th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG 9.2.2 International Summer School, Edinburgh, UK, August 16-21, 2015, Revised Selected Papers (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
David Aspinall, Jan Camenisch, Marit Hansen, Simone Fischer-Hubner, Charles Raab
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R3,335
R2,018
Discovery Miles 20 180
Save R1,317 (39%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book contains a range of keynote papers and submitted papers
presented at the 10th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG
9.2.2 International Summer School, held in Edinburgh, UK, in August
2015. The 14 revised full papers included in this volume were
carefully selected from a total of 43 submissions and were subject
to a two-step review process. In addition, the volume contains 4
invited keynote papers. The papers cover a wide range of topics:
cloud computing, privacy-enhancing technologies, accountability,
measuring privacy and understanding risks, the future of privacy
and data protection regulation, the US privacy perspective, privacy
and security, the PRISMS Decision System, engineering privacy,
cryptography, surveillance, identity management, the European
General Data Protection Regulation framework, communicating privacy
issues to the general population, smart technologies, technology
users' privacy preferences, sensitive applications, collaboration
between humans and machines, and privacy and ethics.
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Privacy and Identity Management. Facing up to Next Steps - 11th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG 9.2.2 International Summer School, Karlstad, Sweden, August 21-26, 2016, Revised Selected Papers (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2016)
Anja Lehmann, Diane Whitehouse, Simone Fischer-Hubner, Lothar Fritsch, Charles Raab
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R3,095
Discovery Miles 30 950
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book contains a range of invited and submitted papers
presented at the 11th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG
9.2.2 International Summer School, held in Karlstad, Sweden, in
August 2016. The 17 revised full papers and one short paper
included in this volume were carefully selected from a total of 42
submissions and were subject to a two-step review process. The
papers combine interdisciplinary approaches to bring together a
host of perspectives: technical, legal, regulatory, socio-economic,
social, societal, political, ethical, anthropological,
philosophical, and psychological. The paper 'Big Data Privacy and
Anonymization' is published open access under a CC BY 4.0 license
at link.springer.com.
|
Privacy and Identity Management. Time for a Revolution? - 10th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG 9.2.2 International Summer School, Edinburgh, UK, August 16-21, 2015, Revised Selected Papers (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2016)
David Aspinall, Jan Camenisch, Marit Hansen, Simone Fischer-Hubner, Charles Raab
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R2,485
Discovery Miles 24 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This book contains a range of keynote papers and submitted papers
presented at the 10th IFIP WG 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6/SIG
9.2.2 International Summer School, held in Edinburgh, UK, in August
2015. The 14 revised full papers included in this volume were
carefully selected from a total of 43 submissions and were subject
to a two-step review process. In addition, the volume contains 4
invited keynote papers. The papers cover a wide range of topics:
cloud computing, privacy-enhancing technologies, accountability,
measuring privacy and understanding risks, the future of privacy
and data protection regulation, the US privacy perspective, privacy
and security, the PRISMS Decision System, engineering privacy,
cryptography, surveillance, identity management, the European
General Data Protection Regulation framework, communicating privacy
issues to the general population, smart technologies, technology
users' privacy preferences, sensitive applications, collaboration
between humans and machines, and privacy and ethics.
Analyzes privacy policy instruments available to contemporary
industrial states, from government regulations and transnational
regimes to self-regulation and privacy enhancing technologies.
Privacy protection, according to Colin Bennett and Charles Raab,
involves politics and public policy as much as it does law and
technology. Moreover, the protection of our personal information in
a globalized, borderless world means that privacy-related policies
are inextricably interdependent. In this updated paperback edition
of The Governance of Privacy, Bennett and Raab analyze a broad
range of privacy policy instruments available to contemporary
advanced industrial states, from government regulations and
transnational regimes to self-regulation and privacy-enhancing
technologies. They consider two possible dynamics of privacy
regulation-a "race to the bottom," with competitive deregulation by
countries eager to attract global investment in information
technology, versus "a race to the top," with the progressive
establishment of global privacy standards. Bennett and Raab begin
by discussing the goals of privacy protection, the liberal and
individualist assumptions behind it, and the neglected relationship
between privacy and social equity. They describe and evaluate
different policy instruments, including the important 1995
Directive on Data Protection from the European Union, as well as
the general efficacy of the "top-down" statutory approach and
self-regulatory and technological alternatives to it. They evaluate
the interrelationships of these policy instruments and their
position in a global framework of regulation and policy by state
and non-state actors. And finally, they consider whether all of
this policy activity at international, national, and corporate
levels necessarily means higher levels of privacy protection.
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