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SIGCAS Computers and Society, Volume 29
Volume 29, Number 1, March 1999
- Herman T. Tavani, Lucas D. Introna:
Computer ethics: philosophical enquiry. 4-8 - Frances S. Grodzinsky:
The practitioner from within: revisiting the virtues. 9-15 - Frans A. J. Birrer:
Understanding values and biases in I.T. 16-21 - Robyn Brothers:
Associative duties, institutional change, and agency: the challenge of the global information society. 22-28 - David H. Gleason:
Subsumption ethics. 29-37 - Irma van der Ploeg:
Written on the body: biometrics and identity. 37-44 - Joseph S. Fulda:
Al watch: field research in artificial intelligence and law: a case study. 45 - Leslie Regan Shade:
Book Review Editor's Message. 46-48 - John P. Sullins:
Artificial knowing: gender and the thinking machine. 47-48 - Rónán Kennedy:
Open location. 50 - Richard G. Epstein:
The silicon valley sentinel - observer. 51-52
Volume 29, Number 2, June 1999
- C. Dianne Martin, Elaine Yale Weltz:
From awareness to action: integrating ethics and social responsibility into the computer science curriculum. 6-14 - Barry Fagin:
Computers, science, and the microsoft case. 15-22 - Jean-Pierre Kuilboer, Noushin Ashrafi, Vivion Vinson:
A collaborative model for training non-IT workers. 23-27 - Herman T. Tavani:
Bibliography update '99: recent books and articles of interest. 28-30 - Joseph S. Fulda:
AI watch: can one really reason about laws? 31 - Felix Stalder:
Geopolitics of Chaos: Internationalization, Cyberculture & Political Chaos By Ignacio Ramonet. (translated from French by Andrea Lyn Sacara). 32-33 - Rónán Kennedy:
Open location. 34 - Darnell Gadberry:
The cutting edge. 35 - Richard G. Epstein:
Transcript of the popular interactive television talk show J'ACCUSE: should virtual advertising be regulated? 36-40
Volume 29, Number 3, September 1999
- Ben Shneiderman:
Human values and the future of technology: a declaration of responsibility. 5-9 - Richard S. Rosenberg:
Yesterday, today, and tomorrow. 10-11 - Chuck Huff:
A plea for amateurs. 11-12 - Don Gotterbarn:
Specifying the standard - make it right: a software engineering code of ethics and professional practice. 13-16 - Rob Kling, Roberta Lamb:
IT and organizational change in digital economies: a socio-technical approach. 17-25 - Herman T. Tavani:
Computer ethics textbooks: a thirty-year retrospective. 26-31
- Rachelle D. Hollander:
Research on social dimensions of information technology at NSF SBTa brief update. 32-33
- Joseph S. Fulda:
How does formal logic fare as a model of legal argumentation? 34-35
- Gary Gocek:
Information warfare and security. 36-37 - Martin Dowding:
Cyberspace divide: equality, agency and policy in the information society (1998). 37-38
Volume 29, Number 4, December 1999
- Ronald E. Anderson:
SIGCAS history: the early years. 4-5 - Joseph S. Fulda:
Solution to a philosophical problem concerning data mining. 6-7 - Phil Vendy, Michael Nofz:
HAL's long, long run: computers and social performance in Stanley Kubrick's 2001. 8-10 - Herman T. Tavani:
Privacy online. 11-19 - Alon Peled:
Why did social scientists miss the bug? 20-23 - Mark Manion, William M. Evan:
The Y2K problem: technological risk and professional responsibility. 24-29 - Kevin W. Bowyer:
Resources for teaching ethics and computing. 30-31 - Harjinder Rahanu:
Teaching professional and ethical aspects of computing: a case study approach. 32-37
- Felix Stalder:
The control revolution: how the internet is putting individuals in charge and changing the world. 38-39
- Rónán Kennedy:
Open location. 40
- Joseph S. Fulda:
Civil justice on the internet: sketch of a proposal. 41
- Richard G. Epstein:
Transcript of televised informercial: karma kleanser. 42-44
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