Social and ethical aspects Books
Manning Publications Data for All
Book SynopsisGain in-depth knowledge about how companies manipulate and exploit personal data. A book that does not require particular technical knowledge – just mere curiosity to explore the subject. From tech experts to the general public, Data for All is the ground-breaking guide to help with the ways third parties use personal data. Written by bestselling author John K Thompson, this edition will aid your understanding of areas, such as The types of data you generate with every action, every day Where your data is stored, who controls it, and how much money they make from it How you can manage access and monetisation of your own data Restricting data access to only companies and organisations you want to support The history of how we think about data, and why that is changing The new data ecosystem is being built right now for your benefit About the technology For years, companies have had free rein to use every click, purchase, and “like” you make, to earn money. Now, across the globe, new laws have been written, passed, and are coming into force, giving individuals the right to access, delete, and monetise their own data. This book provides a vision of how you can use these laws, regulations, and services to directly benefit from your data in new and lucrative ways.
£35.09
New Degree Press Digital Remains: Death, Dying & Remembrance in
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£17.84
O'Reilly Media Jumpstarting C: Learn the All-Purpose Programming
Book SynopsisJumpstarting books provide an avenue for makers to quickly master topical knowledge! Each book starts with instructions on how to install or initialize the hardware or software needed to reach the "Hello, World" stage of getting started! The second project in the book builds on the first to use more of the hardware or software's capabilities. Later projects expand the user's knowledge into lesser-known aspects of the topic. All Jumpstarting projects are for Makers -- they provide hands-on, real-world experience in making the hardware or software do what you want it to do!
£9.45
Harvard Educational Publishing Group Bullying & Cyberbullying: What Every Educator and
Book SynopsisRevised and updated to address shifts in the climate of bullying in schools and online, this timely work suggests anti-bullying approaches that are concrete, practical, and grounded in research. In this deeply insightful work, nationally renowned bullying expert Elizabeth Kandel Englander offers sensible perspectives on student social behavior and equips educators and parents with effective strategies to identify and address bullying. This second edition of Bullying and Cyberbullying reveals how enormous social changes, increased digital connections, and a global pandemic have indelibly altered the psychological world of children—and in turn shaped their peer interactions. Englander notes that effective school bullying prevention and intervention is rooted in a solid understanding of child development, social structures in schools, and the connections between online behavior and in-school socializing. Building on continuing research on smartphone and social media usage, online privacy, and sexting and other risky behaviors, this updated edition prepares educators and parents to identify gateway behaviors, anticipate bias-based bullying, and respond to aggression and harassment. Englander offers sage advice for promoting resilience, strong friendships, and healthy technology use, among other prosocial behaviors that can avert bullying among students. This much-needed work provides an accessible framework for understanding and responding effectively to bullying and offers suggestions for collaboration between educators and parents.Trade Review“Englander's second edition brings a wealth of new knowledge to educators and parents who seek to combat bullying and cyberbullying. My favorite chapters tackle the role of bystanders—and how we can empower them—and the best ways to come alongside parents in supporting their children. Her tone is kind, motivating, and helpful; she realizes these problems cannot be solved easily, but that we can make measurable headway through a variety of specific, actionable strategies.”—Sameer Hinduja, professor, Florida Atlantic University and codirector, Cyberbullying Research Center“Englander lays out the many complex angles to bullying and cyberbullying and makes them easily understood. It is an essential book for parents, educators, and mental health clinicians as well. Englander has deeply influenced my approach to how I assess and treat my patients (and their families) throughout their childhood and teenage years.”—Clifford Sussman, MD, child and adolescent psychiatrist and internet and video game addiction specialist
£32.26
Adams Media Corporation 200 Ways to Protect Your Privacy
Book SynopsisDiscover simple strategies for protecting your personal and confidential information on and offline with this essential and easy-to-understand guide. We all know that the internet can serve as a hotbed for identity theft. But it isn’t the only place where your privacy can be breached. In fact, there are lots of ways you can protect your privacy (or diminish it) that have little or nothing to do with access to the internet. Your home, your photos, your trash can, your kids, your favorite restaurant or store—and even you have the ability to unknowingly reveal your private information to everyone from thieves to busybodies. But you don’t need to hire a specialist to keep your information safe—you can do it yourself with these 200+ easy-to-implement tactics, some of which include: —Shredding hard copies of bills — Turning off Bluetooth when not in use — Using a firewall — Hiding spare keys in an unusual place Keeping your information secure lies in your hands—make sure you’re not putting yourself at risk in your daily habits with this essential guide.
£10.99
Gentle Path Press Facing Internet Technology and Gaming Addiction:
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£23.96
Hardie Grant Books How to Be Online and Also Be Happy
Book SynopsisHow to Be Online and Also Be Happy is your playful guide to using the internet in a rewarding, productive and meaningful way.While spending time online can be one of the most fulfilling aspects of our lives, it’s also a source of great discontent, addiction and anxiety. But there’s no reason to believe that the internet itself is making us sad, it's the way we are using and engaging with it.How to Be Online and Also Be Happy will teach you how to cultivate a conscientious and good-feeling relationship with the internet and social media. Offering tips and advice to help you approach this landscape, former internet addict Issy Beech will teach you how to set boundaries with your devices and show you how you can engage more purposefully, ultimately teaching you how to use the World Wide Web to make you happier.The Survive the Modern World series tackles big subjects in a fun and digestible way. The tone is frank and chatty, but the content is comprehensive. Upskill and expand your knowledge with these accessible pocket guides.
£9.50
Allen & Unwin Is My Phone Reading My Mind
Book SynopsisWhen you think of AI, you might imagine a walking, talking robot or you might think of a giant computer that wants to take over the world, but the reality is that AI is a brilliant human invention that can be found in nearly every modern device from our computers to our cars. AI can seem scary at times, so working out where we use AI and why is an important part of making the best of this exciting technology. So, what is an algorithm and can it help you choose pizza? Can ChatGPT do your homework? And when you watch TV, is it watching you back? All these questions and more about AI are answered in a fun, funny and engaging way.Dr Matt Agnew has a Doctorate in Astrophysics and a Masters in Artificial Intelligence, and believes in making STEM accessible for everyone.
£9.49
Golden Meteorite Press Roles of Technology During Covid-19
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£23.75
Martin Debroh Social Media Detox: Your Online Distractions for
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£15.75
Wits University Press Transnational Families in Africa: Migrants and
Book SynopsisThis is the first book to capture the poignant stories of transnational African families and their use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in mediating their experiences of migration and caring across distance. Transnational Families in Africa analyses the highs and lows of family separation as a result of migration in three contexts: migration within South Africa from rural to urban areas; migration from other African countries into South Africa; and middle-class South Africans emigrating to non-African countries.The book foregrounds the importance of kinship and support from extended family as well as both the responsibilities migatory family members feel and the experience of loss by those left behind. Across the diverse circumstances explored in the book are similarities in migrants’ strategies for keeping in touch, but also large differences in relation to access to ICTs and ease-of-use that highlight the digital divide and generational gaps. As elsewhere in the world, and in spite of the varied experiences in these kinship circles, the phenomenon that is the transnational family is showing no signs of receding. This book provides a groundbreaking contribution to global debates on migration from the Global South.Table of Contents Foreword – Gonzalo Bacigalupe Acknowledgments Part 1 Theoretical Context Chapter 1 Setting the Scene – Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer, Leslie Swartz and Loretta Baldassar Chapter 2 Methodological Challenges and Opportunities: Our Work, Our Selves – Daniella Rafaely, Loretta Baldassar, Leslie Swartz and Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer Part 2 Participants’ Stories of African Migration, Family Relations and ICTs Chapter 3 ‘Ah! Do I Know What Data Is, My Child?’ Rural–Urban Migration and the Struggle to Stay in Touch – Lactricia Maja, Risuna Mathebula, Sonto Madonsela and Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer Chapter 4 ‘They Will Be Yearning’: Zimbabwean Migration to South Africa and Keeping the Family Connected – Siko Moyo, Sonto Madonsela and Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer Chapter 5 ‘You Do Not Finish All Stories’: Malawian Families and the Struggle to Stay Connected – Esther Price and Glory Kabaghe Chapter 6 (Dis)connections: The Paradox of Intergenerational WhatsApp Communication in Transnational Kenyan Families – Ajwang’ Warria Chapter 7 Making a World of Care: DRC Refugees’ Barber Shop Stories – Thembelihle Coka and Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer Chapter 8 The Luxury of Longing: Experiences of ICTs by South African Emigrants to Non-African Countries and Their Families – Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer and Leslie Swartz Part 3 Final Considerations Chapter 9 Analysis of Important Data Emerging from the Study – Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer, Leslie Swartz and Loretta Baldassar Chapter 10 Looking Ahead: Paradox, Criticality and a Way Forward – Daniella Rafaely, Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer, Leslie Swartz and Loretta Baldassar Contributors Index
£14.25
Wits University Press Transnational Families in Africa: Migrants and
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£71.10
Wits University Press Digital Capitalism and its Limits
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£20.79
BCS Learning & Development Limited Writing for Social Media
Book SynopsisEngaging with customers through social media is essential for businesses in this day and age. Writing for social media is different to standard business writing and it can be difficult to get right. Even big brands can get it very wrong. This book walks you through how to deliver maximum benefit for your business through your social media writing. Topics include how to develop a consistent online persona, how to tailor your messages across different social media platforms, how to appeal to your core audience, and useful tools to help you craft and monitor your posts. The dark side of social media is also explored, with examples of social media writing gone wrong, tips on how this can be avoided and advice on how best to handle online criticism.Trade Review'An excellent read covering the current key components and chock full of useful advice.’ -- Mick Phythian MBCS CITP * Research Associate, Centre for Computing & Social Responsibility, De Montfort University *Table of Contents What is Social Media? Know What You Want To Achieve Different Strokes For Different Folks Who Are You? Big Ideas In Small Spaces How To Write For Social Media on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and The Rest How To Write Things People Want To Share Ready! Fire! Aim! 13 Mistakes To Avoid When Creating Social Media Content Timing is Everything: When To Post To Social Media Everyone's Offended: When Businesses' Social Media Posts Go Badly Wrong Do Not Feed The Trolls: How To Handle Online Unpleasantness Tools of the Trade: From Apps To Analytics Afterword Appendix: The Top 11 Social Networks People Are Actually Using
£12.84
BCS Learning & Development Limited Women in Tech: A practical guide to increasing
Book SynopsisIt has long been recognised that the technology industry is not diverse and gender inclusive. In the UK, the proportion of women in technology roles has remained stubbornly beneath 20% for the last twenty years. With this book we hope to help address that. This guide to tackling the gender imbalance in technology professions offers expertise, initiatives and true stories to support those wishing to bring greater gender diversity into the workplace. It aims to inform regarding background, theory and policy; advise on concrete actions that can be undertaken, and to be an exemplar for companies, organisations, establishments and campaigns in the form of real-world case studies.Trade ReviewAs the title promises, 'Women in Tech' is a highly practical resource and will rapidly become the go to resource for anyone wanting to really move the dial on gender diversity in tech. This is a thorough, data-driven piece which effectively and usefully pulls together a wealth of experience, research and real evidence across the whole of the pipeline. Highly recommended. -- Debbie Forster MBE, CEO, Tech Talent Charter'Women in Tech' is a deeply insightful read, bringing together high-quality evidence with an intersectional viewpoint. It delivers a clear action plan for how digital leaders can build diverse teams to deliver lasting change. Hugely recommended. -- Tom Read, Chief Executive Officer / CEO, Government Digital ServiceA must read! Fantastic collaborative narrative and the 'go to place' for anyone working on progressing the ‘Women in Tech’ agenda. The authors have been generous in sharing their knowledge and tips for action based on a wealth of diverse experience. We have been waiting for this and it can be a game-changer. -- Lynn O’Connor, MD Inclusive Work Ltd, Co-Founder of iSAW International and Director, DEI at SageEvery tech leader and every CIO needs to know why diversity brings benefits and how to build an inclusive and successful team. This book tells them what they need to know. -- John Higgins, Chair, Global Digital Foundation and President, BCS, The Chartered Institute for ITThis book is an inspiration on how to build an e-inclusive world. If we all execute these very concrete actions it is an opportunity to make the real difference and activate all women in the employment market going forward. Let’s just do it! -- Saskia Van Uffelen, Digital Champion of Belgium, Digital AgendaThis book is a superb addition to the literature on women in computing in UK. It may be unique in ranging from school through to progression to senior management. It is characterised by the immense strength of its evidence base and the practicality of its recommendations. Chapter 4, on Unconscious Bias, is the pivot: it could sensibly make for compulsory reading for anyone, either male or female, especially for anyone in a decision-making role. The study of allyship in the final chapter is also crucial. I thoroughly recommend the book for anyone involved with computing, regardless of gender. -- John Power, Honorary Professor, Macquarie UniversityWISE believes this book is a positive step forward for gender diversity and looks forward to practically supporting the reader to improve gender balance in their organisation. With WISE Ten Steps™ we have a recommended and practical programme that is proven to be impactful. Together we all can successfully address the challenge and thereby benefit individuals, families, communities and the country. -- Kay Hussain, CEO, Women Into Science and Engineering (WISE)A thorough and insightful guide to the iniquities and challenges facing women in tech, with valuable practical advice for how to effect change. This book should be read by all men in tech – especially those in leadership positions who have the power and responsibility to address the shameful lack of diversity in the industry. -- Bryan Glick, Editor in Chief, Computer WeeklyFrom a diverse and experienced set of authors, this refreshingly honest and inclusive up to date set of tools will help organisations and leaders consider new and relatable approaches to attracting, growing and retaining talent. The approaches set out are based on experiences and pragmatic forward thinking to create and sustain a happier, healthier, more inclusive and therefore innovative workforce. Crucially, it will help you make a genuine impact on the future talent in your community and your organisation, both now and in the future. -- Roxane Heaton, CIO and Digital, Data and Technology LeaderI congratulate BCS and the authors for stepping forward with this publication. It is refreshing to see BCS Publishing collaborate with leading gender diversity and inclusion groups such as WISE, to support the challenges and opportunities in Tech together. Together we can help fill address the D&I imperative and in so doing the digital skills deficit that can open up additional and enhanced opportunities for all. -- Trudy Norris-Grey, Chair of WISE BoardSuperbly written, the authors have combined their vast knowledge and expertise to provide a concise, practical guide with interventions to help anyone looking to support and make progress for women in technology. Well researched with why we are still falling short within schools, universities and in our workplaces, this book is a fantastic resource providing professionals with the practical steps to take action and drive change. -- Rav Bumbra, Diversity Consultant, Founder and CEO CajigoThis book is a very fact-based, well-researched piece of work. It covers everything from today’s position and how we got here, through to the analysis of education, and why the UK differs in its gender imbalance where other countries do not. The book points us to some very good practical steps that could be employed to achieve a more diverse and gender balanced workforce in the IT industry. The evidence points us to look at the longer term and does not try to give short-term ‘sticking plaster’ answers to a very challenging environment, which is not just related to IT but many other industries. -- Dawn Wright, Chair of the Equalities Committee, Worshipful Company of Information Technologists (WCIT)BCS have managed to collate a myriad of resources on the subject and produce a guide that not only explains how we are in this situation but also gives us direction on how to make change. An essential resource for anyone working on diversifying their tech workforce. -- Anne-Marie Balfour CISM CGEITEvery technology employer should read this book on diversity and inclusivity and apply the concrete actions and practical guidance detailed within it. This is a welcome resource for the cyber security profession as well as the wider tech community. -- Don MacIntyre, Interim Chief Executive Officer, The UK Cyber Security Council‘Women in Tech’ is an important book. The combined authority of its six preeminent authors lends enormous weight to its central argument: levelling up diversity in tech is fundamental to our future. But in also articulating the methods by which that can be achieved, it puts itself at the top of the required reading list. If you’re planning to distribute paperwork at the next leadership meeting, let it be this. -- Tech For Good, techforgood.netAn easily digestible read that doesn’t hide the damning reality for women in tech. YBA believe it is important for everyone to read this book regardless of characteristics such as their age or experience. The authors use a data-backed representation of the current environment with well-explained strategies and practical tips enabling readers to ignite change, make an impact and make it last. This resonated with us at YBA: ‘You can’t be what you can’t see.’ -- Young Business Analysts (YBA)Table of Contents The Business Case for Diversity Computing in Schools Women in Higher Education Computing Unconscious Bias Establishing a Programme/Project to Attract and/or Retain Women in Tech Attracting Women into Tech Retaining and Progressing Women Within the Technology Industry Conclusion
£23.74
Anthem Press Connecting ICTs to Development: The IDRC
Book SynopsisOver the past two decades, projects supported by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) have critically examined the ways in which information and communications technologies (ICTs) can be used to improve learning, empower the disenfranchised, generate income opportunities for the poor, and facilitate access to healthcare in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. Considering that most development institutions and governments are currently attempting to integrate ICTs into their practices, it is an opportune time to reflect on the research findings that have emerged from IDRC’s work and research in this area. “Connecting ICTs to Development” discusses programmatic investments made by IDRC in a wide variety of areas related to ICTs, including infrastructure, access, regulations, health, governance, education, livelihoods, social inclusion, technical innovation, intellectual property rights and evaluation. Each chapter in this book analyzes the ways in which research findings from IDRC-supported projects have contributed to an evolution of thinking, and discusses successes and challenges in using ICTs as tools to address development issues. The volume also presents key lessons learned from ICT4D programming and recommendations for future work.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments; INTRODUCTION PART I: From Heresy to Orthodoxy: ICT4D at IDRC – Richard Fuchs; INTRODUCTION PART II: From Beginning to End to Beginning Again – Katie Bryant, Laurent Elder, Heloise Emdon and Richard Fuchs; CHAPTER 1: Catalyzing Access through Social and Technical Innovation – John-Harmen Valk, Frank Tulus, Raymond Hyma and Florencio Ceballos; CHAPTER 2: Catalyzing Access via Telecommunications Policy and Regulatory Research – John-Harmen Valk and Khaled Fourati; CHAPTER 3: Access to Knowledge as a New Paradigm for Research on ICTs and Intellectual Property – Jeremy de Beer and Sara Bannerman; CHAPTER 4: ICTs and Social Inclusion – Chaitali Sinha and Raymond Hyma; CHAPTER 5: Access and Usage of ICTs by the Poor (Part I) – Kathleen Diga; CHAPTER 6: Local Economic Opportunities and ICTs: How ICTs Affect Livelihoods (Part II) – Kathleen Diga; CHAPTER 7: Research on eHealth across Health Systems: Contributions to Strengthen a Field – Chaitali Sinha and Dominique Garro-Strauss; CHAPTER 8: Making the Grade: The Role of ICTs in Providing Access to Knowledge – Ahmed T. Rashid, Alioune Camara, Maria Ng and Alicia Richero; CHAPTER 9: E-Government for Development: ICTs in the Public Sector and the Evolving Citizen–Government Relationship – Tara Fischer, Matthew L. Smith and John-Harmen Valk; CHAPTER 10: Innovations in Evaluating ICT4D Research – Sarah Earl, Chaitali Sinha and Matthew L. Smith; CHAPTER 11: Conclusions: A Decade of Innovation that Matters – Richard Fuchs and Laurent Elder; EPILOGUE: Into the Future: New Opportunities and Threats in a Global Networked Society – Laurent Elder; Author Biographies
£23.75
Anthem Press E-Government for Good Governance in Developing
Book SynopsisDrawing lessons from the eFez Project in Morocco, this volume offers practical supporting material to decision makers in developing countries on information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D), specifically e-government implementation. The book documents the eFez Project experience in all of its aspects, presenting the project’s findings and the practical methods developed by the authors (a roadmap, impact assessment framework, design issues, lessons learned and best practices) in their systematic quest to turn eFez’s indigenous experimentations and findings into a formal framework for academics, practitioners and decision makers. The volume also reviews, analyzes and synthesizes the findings of other projects to offer a comparative study of the eFez framework and a number of other e-government frameworks from the growing literature. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements; Foreword; Chapter I: Global Context; Chapter II: The Two Facets of ICT for Development; Chapter III: E-Government and E-Governance; Chapter IV: Evaluation of Outcomes/Impacts on Good Governance; Chapter V: Adopting a Transformative Approach in E-Government Systems Development; Chapter VI: A Generic Roadmap for ICT4D/E-Government Projects; Chapter VII: The eFez Project Roadmap; Chapter VIII: Technology Enablers for E-Government Systems; Chapter IX: Conclusion; Appendix: A synthetic View of Critical Issues for a Successful ITC4D/E-Government Project; References; Index
£23.75
Verso Books Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life
Book SynopsisEverywhere we turn, a startling new device promises to transfigure our lives. But at what cost? In this urgent and revelatory excavation of our Information Age, leading technology thinker Adam Greenfield forces us to reconsider our relationship with the networked objects, services and spaces that define us. It is time to reevaluate the Silicon Valley consensus determining the future.Having successfully colonised everyday life, radical technologies - from smartphones, blockchain, augmented-reality interfaces and virtual assistants to 3D printing, autonomous delivery drones and self-driving cars - are now conditioning the choices available to us in the years to come. How do they work? What challenges do they present to us, as individuals and societies? Who benefits from their adoption? In answering these questions, Greenfield's timely guide clarifies the scale and nature of the crisis we now confront - and offers ways to reclaim our stake in the future.Trade ReviewAdam Greenfield goes digging into the layers that constitute what we experience as smooth tech surface. He unsettles and repositions much of that smoothness. Radical Technologies is brilliant and scary. -- Saskia Sassen, Columbia University, author of Expulsions.We exist within an ever-thickening web of technologies whose workings are increasingly opaque to us. In this illuminating and sometimes deeply disturbing book Adam Greenfield explores how these systems work, how they synergise with each other, and the resultant effects on our societies, our politics, and our psyches. This is an essential book. -- Brian EnoA tremendously intelligent and stylish book on the 'colonization of everyday life by information processing' calls for resistance to rule by the tech elite... a landmark primer and spur to more informed and effective opposition -- Steve Poole * Guardian *"Fascinating and scary.[Adam Greenfield] is very well informed about a whole host of technologies that we hear a lot about but (if you're like me) have a hard time grasping. He's a graceful writer, so even when he's angry he's eloquent without relying on emotional cues or nostalgia. More importantly, he thinks new technologies have a lot of potential - but if we fail to pay attention, all of its benefits will reinforce current power structures. What they call 'innovation' now that 'progress' has gone out of style is the entrenchment of power and wealth." -- Barbara Fister * Inside Higher Ed *
£10.44
Icon Books Big Data: How the Information Revolution Is
Book SynopsisIs the Brexit vote successful big data politics or the end of democracy? Why do airlines overbook, and why do banks get it wrong so often? How does big data enable Netflix to forecast a hit, CERN to find the Higgs boson and medics to discover if red wine really is good for you? And how are companies using big data to benefit from smart meters, use advertising that spies on you and develop the gig economy, where workers are managed by the whim of an algorithm?The volumes of data we now access can give unparalleled abilities to make predictions, respond to customer demand and solve problems. But Big Brother's shadow hovers over it. Though big data can set us free and enhance our lives, it has the potential to create an underclass and a totalitarian state. With big data ever-present, you can't afford to ignore it. Acclaimed science writer Brian Clegg - a habitual early adopter of new technology (and the owner of the second-ever copy of Windows in the UK) - brings big data to life.Trade ReviewAs always, Clegg writes with an easy clarity that draws us in - no technical expertise required to understand his exploration of this essential subject - and throughout Big Data's highly enjoyable pages, the spread and range of material is highly impressive - dizzying in fact. I personally found entirely new perspectives on the subject that will keep me pondering for quite some time. I should add that, if I were still a statistics lecturer at Oxford, I would recommend the book to my students as bedside reading. -- Peet Morris * Former Lecturer in Statistics (St Hilda’s College Oxford), Lecturer/Researcher in software development *Clegg provides an engaging insight, reflecting on its positives and negatives. A holiday workout for the brain. * Saga Magazine *Acclaimed science writer Brian Clegg - a habitual early adopter of new technology (and the owner of the second-ever copy of Windows in the UK) brings big data to life. * Laboratory News *
£8.54
Icon Books Lost in a Good Game: Why we play video games and
Book Synopsis'Etchells writes eloquently ... A heartfelt defence of a demonised pastime' The Times'Once in an age, a piece of culture comes along that feels like it was specifically created for you, the beats and words and ideas are there because it is your life the creator is describing. Lost In A Good Game is exactly that. It will touch your heart and mind. And even if Bowser, Chun-li or Q-Bert weren't crucial parts of your youth, this is a flawless victory for everyone' Adam RutherfordWhen Pete Etchells was 14, his father died from motor neurone disease. In order to cope, he immersed himself in a virtual world - first as an escape, but later to try to understand what had happened. Etchells is now a researcher into the psychological effects of video games, and was co-author on a recent paper explaining why WHO plans to classify 'game addiction' as a danger to public health are based on bad science and (he thinks) are a bad idea.In this, his first book, he journeys through the history and development of video games - from Turing's chess machine to mass multiplayer online games like World of Warcraft- via scientific study, to investigate the highs and lows of playing and get to the bottom of our relationship with games - why we do it, and what they really mean to us.At the same time, Lost in a Good Game is a very unusual memoir of a writer coming to terms with his grief via virtual worlds, as he tries to work out what area of popular culture we should classify games (a relatively new technology) under.Trade ReviewAn anecdotal survey that is enriching and touching, while issuing a challenge to the bad science surrounding the subject. -- New StatesmanEtchells writes eloquently ... A heartfelt defence of a demonised pastime * The Times *Once in an age, a piece of culture comes along that feels like it was specifically created for you, the beats and words and ideas are there because it is your life the creator is describing. Lost In A Good Game is exactly that. It will touch your heart and mind. And even if Bowser, Chun-li or Q-Bert weren't crucial parts of your youth, this is a flawless victory for everyone -- Adam RutherfordPete Etchells' debut book Lost in a Good Game takes the reader on a much needed, highly informative, but still intriguingly personal journey through the much maligned yet increasingly beloved and influential world of video games -- Dean Burnett, neuroscientist and author of The Happy Brain
£9.49
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc Hyperconnectivity: Economical, Social and
Book SynopsisThe use of digital information and communication technologies would be the traces of a social acceptability of the exploitation of all data, in the context of negotiations of uses. This is the reason why the users present themselves actors and contributors of the hyperconnectivity. We would thus witness a new form of dissemination, inviting user experience and social innovations. It is thus the victory of subordination by negotiated renunciation; A new form of serving, no longer that of the 1980s, with the counters and other services, which have become uncontrolled services - excepted when the users are overcome by restrictive ergonomics, revealing too much the subordination device - which joins the prescription apparently without an injunction. The lure is at its height when users and broadcasters come together to produce the services and goods, composing the business model, until the very existence of the companies, in particular the pure players. Crowdsourcing becomes legitimate: consumers create the content, deliver the data, the basis of the service sold (in a painless way because free access most of the time, indirect financing), the providers make available and administer the service, networks , Interfaces (representing considerable costs), also reputation to attract the attention of other consumers or contributors. In these conditions, the environmental stakes are considerable, so we propose another way of considering them, not as they are dealt with - material and pollution - but according to the prism of the relational practices analyzed in this volume.Table of ContentsIntroduction vii Chapter 1 The Technological Offer and Globalized Services 1 1.1 Importance of the open communication protocol 2 1.2 Mediation and industrialization of connection 7 1.3 Monopolies and dominance 11 Chapter 2 The Hyperconnected Economy 21 2.1 A free mode of access and use 22 2.2 Two indirect funding methods: advertising and data marketing 28 2.2.1 Advertising revenues 29 2.2.2 Data production and sales 33 2.3 An activation method: solicitation 36 2.4 The government’s involvement 44 Chapter 3 Social Appropriation and Digital Culture 51 3.1 Ambivalence of uses 58 3.2 Industrialization of the uses of interactivity: territories of hyperconnectivity 66 3.3 Uses of interactivity 73 Chapter 4 Renunciation and Negotiations 77 4.1 Uses at the foundation of renunciation and negotiations 77 4.2 Negotiated renunciation 92 Chapter 5 Environmental Issues 105 5.1 Absence of environmental dimension 107 5.2 Materiality of the immaterial 112 5.3 Energy consumption and greenhouse gas production 120 5.4 Impacts of software and website design 127 5.5 Injunctive, ecological and programmed obsolescence 132 5.5.1 Planned obsolescence 133 5.5.2 Injunctive obsolescence 135 5.5.3 Ecological obsolescence 136 Conclusion 139 References 147 Index 161
£125.06
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc The Algorithmic Code of Ethics: Ethics at the
Book SynopsisThe technical progress illustrated by the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI), Big Data technologies, the Internet of Things (IoT), online platforms, NBICs, autonomous expert systems, and the Blockchain let appear the possibility of a new world and the emergence of a fourth industrial revolution centered around digital data. Therefore, the advent of digital and its omnipresence in our modern society create a growing need to lay ethical benchmarks against this new religion of data, the "dataisme".Table of ContentsForeword viiLina WILLIATTE Acknowledgments ix Introduction xi Chapter 1. Ethics at the Service of Digital Technology 1 1.1. Towards a new paradigm of the digital society 2 1.2. Questions regarding the algorithmic universe 8 1.3. Ethics as a digital compass 19 1.4. Ethical challenges and risks regarding algorithmic processing 27 1.5. The environmental parameters of digital technology 37 1.6. What is the place of mankind in this digital society? 43 Chapter 2. The Code is Ethics and Ethics is the Code 55 2.1. Nature, the creator of codes, programming and algorithms 56 2.2. Algorithmic Darwinism 62 2.3. The evolutionary digital world 64 2.4. Environmental ethics 67 2.5. Algorithmic ethics 72 2.5.1. The symbiotic bridge between algorithms and ethics 75 2.5.2. Trust at the heart of a new ethics 79 2.5.3. The “blockchainization” of ethics 87 2.6. The codification of ethics via a process of networks of neurons 90 2.7. The complexity around an ethical AI 98 2.8. The Neo-Platonist ethical systemic platform (Ψ, G, Φ) 104 2.9. The systemic analysis approach centered on the individual in a digital ecosystem 112 2.10. Toward quantum ethics? 118 Chapter 3. The Framework for Algorithmic Processing 121 3.1. Characteristics of NICT essential for their use 122 3.1.1. Adaptability 125 3.1.2. Availability 125 3.1.3. Robustness 125 3.1.4. Auditability 127 3.1.5. IT integration 128 3.1.6. Consolidation 128 3.1.7. Diffusion 129 3.1.8. Co-ordination 129 3.1.9. Interoperability 129 3.2. Scenarios for the digital economy. 131 3.2.1. Scenario 1: the generalization and commercialization of algorithms combined with Platform as a Service (PaaS) tools 134 3.2.2. Scenario 2: organization into silos independent of data producers and algorithmic processing specialists 134 3.2.3. Scenario 3: domination of AI leaders via proprietary algorithms with unparalleled performances 135 3.3. An algorithm’s ethical rules 137 3.4. Ethical evaluation of algorithmic processing 142 3.4.1. Evaluation of data and practices 144 3.4.2. Evaluating the algorithm and its practices 146 3.5. The framework surrounding algorithmic systems 149 3.5.1. Digital governance 150 3.5.2. Digital regulation 155 3.5.3. Digital confidence 160 3.5.4. Algorithmic responsibility 164 3.6. Ethical management and direction framing algorithmic systems 169 Conclusion 179 Appendix 185 List of Abbreviations 191 References 197 Index 207
£125.06
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc Inside the World of Computing: Technologies,
Book SynopsisComputers and the Internet are an undeniable and inextricable part of our daily lives. This book is for those who wish to better understand how this came to be. It explores the technological bases of computers, networks, software and data management, leading to the development of four �pillars� on which the essential applications that have a strong impact on individuals and society are based: embedded systems, Artificial Intelligence, the Internet, image processing and vision. We will travel to the heart of major application areas: robotics, virtual reality, health, mobility, energy, the factory of the future, not forgetting the major questions that this �digitization� can raise. This book is the author�s testimony after fifty years spent in environments that are very open to new technologies. It offers perspectives on the evolution of the digital world that we live in.Table of ContentsForeword xiJean-Pierre BAN TRE Preface xv Acknowledgments xxi Chapter 1. From the Calculator to the Supercomputer 1 1.1. Introduction 1 1.2. Some important concepts 1 1.2.1. Information and data 1 1.2.2. Binary system 3 1.2.3. Coding 3 1.2.4. Algorithm 5 1.2.5. Program 7 1.3. Towards automation of calculations 7 1.3.1. Slide rule 7 1.3.2. The Pascaline 8 1.3.3. The Jacquard loom 9 1.3.4. Babbage’s machine 9 1.3.5. The first desktop calculators 10 1.3.6. Hollerith’s machine 11 1.4. The first programmable computers 12 1.4.1. Konrad Zuse’s machines 12 1.4.2. Colossus 13 1.4.3. ENIAC 13 1.5. Generations of computers 14 1.5.1. First generation: the transition to electronics 15 1.5.2. Second generation: the era of the transistor 17 1.5.3. Third generation: the era of integrated circuits 20 1.5.4. Fourth generation: the era of microprocessors 24 1.6. Supercomputers 28 1.6.1. Some fields of use 28 1.6.2. History of supercomputers 29 1.6.3. Towards exaflops 33 1.7. What about the future? 35 1.7.1. An energy and ecological challenge 35 1.7.2. Revolutions in sight? 36 Chapter 2. Computer Networks and Their Applications 37 2.1. Introduction 37 2.2. A long history 38 2.3. Computer network infrastructure 42 2.3.1. Geographic coverage: from PAN to WAN 43 2.3.2. Communication media 44 2.3.3. Interconnection equipment and topologies 48 2.3.4. Two other characteristics of computer networks 52 2.3.5. Quality of service 54 2.4. Communication protocols and the Internet 55 2.4.1. The first protocols 55 2.4.2. The OSI model 56 2.4.3. The history of the Internet 57 2.4.4. The TCP/IP protocol 58 2.4.5. IP addressing 59 2.4.6. Management and use of the Internet 60 2.4.7. Evolving technologies 61 2.4.8. What future? 62 2.5. Applications 63 2.5.1. The World Wide Web 64 2.5.2. Cloud computing 67 2.5.3. The Internet of Things 68 2.5.4. Ubiquitous computing and spontaneous networks 72 2.6. Networks and security 74 2.6.1. Vulnerabilities 74 2.6.2. The protection of a network 76 2.6.3. Message encryption 76 2.6.4. Checking its security 77 Chapter 3. Software 79 3.1. Introduction 79 3.2. From algorithm to computer program 80 3.2.1. Programs and subprograms 82 3.2.2. Programming languages 83 3.3. Basic languages and operating systems 85 3.3.1. Basic languages 85 3.3.2. Operating system functions 86 3.3.3. A bit of history 88 3.3.4. Universal operating systems 91 3.3.5. Targeted operating systems 93 3.4. “High-level” programming and applications 96 3.4.1. Imperative languages 96 3.4.2. Functional languages 98 3.4.3. Object programming 99 3.4.4. Other programming languages 100 3.4.5. The most used languages 101 3.5. Software development 102 3.5.1. Software categories 102 3.5.2. Software quality 103 3.5.3. Development methods 104 3.5.4. Software engineering 107 3.6. Software verification and validation 107 3.6.1. Errors with sometimes tragic consequences 107 3.6.2. Software testing 109 3.6.3. Formal methods 111 3.6.4. Software certification 114 3.7. Legal protection and distribution of software 115 3.7.1. Legal protection of software 115 3.7.2. Licenses 116 3.7.3. Free software and open source 117 3.8. The software market 118 Chapter 4. Data: From Binary Element to Intelligence 121 4.1. Introduction 121 4.2. Data and information 122 4.2.1. Digitization of data 122 4.2.2. Data compression 125 4.3. The structuring of data towards information 125 4.3.1. Structured data 126 4.3.2. Semi-structured data and the Web 127 4.4. Files and their formats 128 4.5. Databases 129 4.5.1. The main characteristics 129 4.5.2. DBMS models 131 4.5.3. Database design 133 4.5.4. Enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems 133 4.5.5. Other types of databases 134 4.5.6. Data protection in a DB 137 4.6. Intelligence and Big Data 137 4.7. Data ownership and Open Data 141 4.7.1. Personal data 141 4.7.2. Opening up public data: Open Data 142 Chapter 5. Technology Building Blocks 145 5.1. Embedded systems 145 5.1.1. Specific architectures 146 5.1.2. Some fields of use 147 5.2. Artificial intelligence (AI) 150 5.2.1. A bit of history 150 5.2.2. Intelligence or statistics? 152 5.2.3. Important work around automatic learning 152 5.2.4. A multiplication of applications 154 5.2.5. The challenges of AI 155 5.2.6. What about intelligence? 156 5.3. The Internet 157 5.3.1. Mobility 157 5.3.2. Social networks 158 5.3.3. The Internet of Things 159 5.3.4. The Cloud 159 5.3.5. Blockchain 159 5.3.6. Vulnerabilities 160 5.4. Image processing and vision 160 5.4.1. A bit of history 160 5.4.2. Image sources and their uses 161 5.4.3. The digital image 162 5.4.4. Image storage and compression 163 5.4.5. Computing and images 164 5.4.6. Some applications 165 5.5. Conclusion 166 Chapter 6. Some Areas of Application 167 6.1. Robots 167 6.1.1. A bit of history 168 6.1.2. Fields of use regarding robots today 169 6.1.3. Communication in the world of robots 173 6.1.4. Fear of robots 174 6.1.5. Challenges for researchers 175 6.2. Virtual reality and augmented reality 175 6.2.1. A bit of history 176 6.2.2. Hardware configurations of virtual reality 177 6.2.3. Fields of use of virtual reality 179 6.2.4. Augmented reality 180 6.3. Health 181 6.3.1. Health informatics 182 6.3.2. Information technology at the service of our health 184 6.4. The connected (and soon autonomous?) car 185 6.4.1. Levels of autonomy 186 6.4.2. Challenges associated with the autonomous car 187 6.4.3. Advantages and disadvantages of the autonomous car 188 6.5. The smart city 189 6.5.1. Smart energy 190 6.5.2. Smart buildings 190 6.5.3. Smart infrastructure 191 6.5.4. Smart governance 192 6.5.5. Dangers 193 6.6. Smart mobility 193 6.7. The factory of the future 195 6.7.1. Technologies 195 6.7.2. Issues 197 6.7.3. The place of the human 198 Chapter 7. Societal Issues 199 7.1. Security 199 7.1.1. Specific characteristics 200 7.1.2. Some great threats 200 7.1.3. Acting to protect oneself 202 7.2. The respect of private life 202 7.2.1. Our personal data 202 7.2.2. Uses of our data 204 7.2.3. What about the future? 205 x Inside the World of Computing 7.3. Influence on social life 206 7.3.1. The development of social ties 206 7.3.2. Citizen participation 207 7.3.3. The socialization of knowledge 207 7.4. Dangers to democracy 208 7.4.1. The liberation of speech 208 7.4.2. Private life under surveillance 208 7.4.3. Job insecurity 209 7.4.4. The power of the big Internet firms 209 7.5. The digital divide 210 7.5.1. From division to exclusion 210 7.5.2. Digital technology and education 211 7.6. Mastering the use of artificial intelligence 212 7.7. The intelligent prosthesis and the bionic man 213 7.8. Transhumanism 214 7.9. What kind of society for tomorrow? 215 Bibliography 217 Index 219
£124.15
Quadrille Publishing Ltd GOALS
Book SynopsisBeing an adult is like trying to fold a fitted sheet.I''m just a girl, standing in front of a salad, asking it to be a donut.I was hot until my photoshop free-trial expired.From Instagram to Twitter, we all want to be a social media star these days. But behind your phone screen are those perfectly filtered lives all they''re really cracked up to be? For millennials everywhere comes a book that says what we''re all really thinking. Whether it''s stuffing your face with pizza while scrolling through Gigi Hadid''s feed or experiencing life at the speed of fifteen WTF''s per hour, this is the real life struggle of getting that double tap and achieving #goals.
£6.93
Vintage Publishing The Detective: The addictive NEW
Book Synopsis*As seen on The One Show**A Sunday Times Crime Book of the Year*'A rip-roaring mystery that's engrossing from start to finish' ABIR MUKHERJEEHAS SOMEONE GOT AWAY WITH MURDER?On the verge of a four-billion-dollar deal, a tech entrepreneur from Shoreditch is found dead in a construction site, which leads to the discovery of three skeletons over a hundred years old.But as fresh bodies turn up, can Detective Kamil - along with his friend Anjoli - prevent another murder?Desperate to solve his first case for the Met, will Kamil put his reputation on the line... then cross it?*The thrilling new Kamil Rahman mystery, THE SPY, is available to pre-order now!*Praise for the Detective Kamil Rahman series:'Hugely entertaining' ANN CLEEVES'The Detective has all the ingredients for a great crime series' SUN'[Kamil is a] likeable inspector . . . We shall hear much more of him' DAILY MAIL'An elegantly constructed thriller' THE TIMES'Outstanding' SUNDAY TIMESTrade ReviewHugely entertaining * Ann Cleeves *Ajay Chowdhury’s crime novels set in the East End are vivid portraits of modern life. * Sunday Times, Best Books of the Year *An entertaining story that ranges across love, murder and an intriguing family tree * Sun *A rip-roaring mystery that's engrossing from start to finish * Abir Mukherjee *Chowdhury brings his own expertise in modern tech to the plot, combining it with hot button history, and a biting wit. The series goes from strength to strength * Vaseem Khan *
£13.49
Vintage Publishing The Detective: The addictive NEW
Book Synopsis*As seen on The One Show**A Sunday Times Crime Book of the Year*'A rip-roaring mystery that's engrossing from start to finish' ABIR MUKHERJEEHAS SOMEONE GOT AWAY WITH MURDER?On the verge of a four-billion-dollar deal, a tech entrepreneur from Shoreditch is found dead in a construction site, which leads to the discovery of three skeletons over a hundred years old.But as fresh bodies turn up, can Detective Kamil - along with his friend Anjoli - prevent another murder?Desperate to solve his first case for the Met, will Kamil put his reputation on the line... then cross it?*The thrilling new Kamil Rahman mystery, THE SPY, is available to pre-order now!*Praise for the Detective Kamil Rahman series:'Hugely entertaining' ANN CLEEVES'The Detective has all the ingredients for a great crime series' SUN'[Kamil is a] likeable inspector . . . We shall hear much more of him' DAILY MAIL'An elegantly constructed thriller' THE TIMES'Outstanding' SUNDAY TIMESTrade ReviewHugely entertaining * Ann Cleeves *Ajay Chowdhury’s crime novels set in the East End are vivid portraits of modern life. * Sunday Times, Best Books of the Year *An entertaining story that ranges across love, murder and an intriguing family tree * Sun *A rip-roaring mystery that's engrossing from start to finish * Abir Mukherjee *Chowdhury brings his own expertise in modern tech to the plot, combining it with hot button history, and a biting wit. The series goes from strength to strength * Vaseem Khan *
£13.29
Emerald Publishing Limited A World Beyond Work?: Labour, Money and the
Book SynopsisSensing a future beyond work lurking in an age of crisis, the ‘post-capitalist’ utopias of today spread the idea of a permanent escape from work aided by the automation of production, a universal basic income and the reduction of working hours to zero. By skilfully unpicking the political economy of contemporary work and its futures, this book mounts a forceful critique of the post-work society vision. Dinerstein and Pitts reveal that transitional measures towards a world beyond work do not do enough to break away from the key features of capitalist society, and instead potentially stifle the capacity for transformative social change. Proposing an innovative alternative, the authors envision the construction of ‘concrete utopias’ that shape and anticipate non-capitalist futures.Trade Review‘Ana Cecilia Dinerstein and Frederick Pitts' book is a fundamental contribution to the debate on post-capitalist utopias. The Coronavirus crisis has accelerated the morbid symptoms of austerity-driven capitalism, and we must develop new strategies to escape the increasingly authoritarian trends of nation-states. A World Beyond Work offers a blueprint ready to develop a future against and beyond capitalism. This will be an essential read for the next decade.’ -- Dr Mònica Clua Losada, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley‘A World Beyond Work? is one of the great books of our generation. The future of work and the notion of basic income are topics on which every active citizen must form a view. Too often, these topics are discussed by referring to money and the state in an untheorised and, ultimately, naive way. Dinerstein and Pitts avoid these pitfalls by drawing on the work of Marx. Political issues and issues in the social sciences compete for attention and, sometimes, have an ephemeral feel. A World Beyond Work? is different. It is a landmark. We shall be consulting Dinerstein and Pitts for years.’ -- -Richard Gunn, co-founder of open Marxism‘As we look towards building the economic order of the 21st century, post-capitalist and post-work visions capture the interest of many across the left and beyond. Dinerstein and Pitts undertake the necessary work of taking this stance seriously, offering a balanced, dense, thoughtful and enriching critique.’ -- -Alessandro Gandini, University of Milan‘This is a timely and important book. In it, Dinerstein and Pitts carefully dissect loose arguments that automation and basic income necessarily promise a better future. Their theoretical and empirical rigour offer a vital corrective to misplaced and uncritical hope and invite scholars and activists to think carefully about the demands they are making, how, and why.’ -- -Neil Howard, University of Bath‘This book offers a scholarly contribution to studies of value, work, (un)employment, and social movements in the 21st Century. This is also a book about hope and creativity at a time of narrow horizons and bleak pessimism. It brings to us a world with new possibilities of freedom. Dinerstein and Pitts point to new pathways to this world – pathways broader than postwar social democracy, more radical than the traditional communist parties, and carefully attuned to our own times of overlapping crises of profitability, living standards, health and the environment. A must!’ -- -Alfredo Saad-Filho, King’s College London'This is a ground-breaking contribution to debates about the future of work, mechanisation and social reproduction. Anyone interested in these themes – and particularly the highly topical issue of universal basic income – should read Dinerstein’s and Pitts’ powerful critique. The authors offer a vital antidote to the technological utopianism widespread on the left today.' -- Adrian Wilding, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin'With an insightful combination of theoretical debates on political economy, the State and social change, this book offers a perceptive debunking of political practice today for a new radical horizon, this book is a must read in this dire times.' -- Mariano Féliz, National University of La Plata.'The book provides a sustained critique of the notion that we are on the verge of a post work society, where the travails of wage labour will be overcome by a fully automated production process, underpinned by a universal basic income. Grounded in Karl Marx’s value theory of labour, the authors argue human emancipation cannot be dependent on state handouts; but, rather, on the everyday prefigurative struggles of grassroots social movements. Study this book.' -- Mike Neary, Emeritus professor, University of Lincoln.'Discussing the world to come is essential, but even more important is where we stand to enter this important debate. This book offers an open Marxist critique of the post-capitalist UBI and automation-based utopia by placing ‘uncomfortable' categories (value, money, state, and class struggle) at the center of the analysis to comprehend the contradictory dynamics and emancipatory power of concrete struggles (utopias) against the world of money.' -- Luciana Ghiotto, University of San Martin.'Dinerstein and Pitts strike a very fine balance between rigour and fluidity throughout the book, which makes it inviting for graduate students too.' -- Daniel S. Lacerda, Work, Employment & Society JournalTable of ContentsChapter 1. Post-work, Post-capitalism, Post-what? An Introduction Chapter 2. Futures Past and Present: On Automation Chapter 3. The Post-Work Prospectus: On Labour Chapter 4. Productivist Mandates: On Value Chapter 5. Pennies from Heaven: On Money Chapter 6. Basic Income in One Country: On the State Chapter 7. Liquidating Labour Struggles? On Social Reproduction Chapter 8. Hope and Prefigurative Translation: On Utopia
£17.09
Europa Editions (UK) Ltd The Tyranny of Algorithms
Book SynopsisThe impact of the digital world and its algorithms on human beings and societyWe read all sorts of things about AI, as the promise of a future happiness or as a threat capable of putting an end to humanity. While we cannot be "for" or "against" AI – it’s already here, and not likely to disappear any time soon - the question we face is how to exist as human beings - individually, socially, collectively - in a world governed by algorithms. Since the dawn of humanity, technological objects have intersected with the human mind: it is we who have shaped them; but as we use them, they in turn shape our brain. With the development of new technologies, this hybridization is becoming more and more apparent, and machines now threaten to colonize us, if we use them badly. AI allows us to make many kinds of work easier, but these benefits often come at the cost of reducing a person to a set of micro-data, far removed from the human characteristics that define him. Worse yet: the whole economy is now subject to the "decisions" suggested by machines. We have entered an era of algorithmic governmentality, in which leaders have deliberately delegated their decision-making to AI.How, then, can we still talk about democracy? And consequently, how can we organize collective action, confronted by a power that is based on the supposed infallibility of machines? Benasayag gives his considered answers in this short but illuminating book, a hybrid of essay and interview. Trade ReviewA hybrid of essay and dialogue in which anthropologist Régis Meyran and philosopher Miguel Benasayag ask one of the fundamental questions of our time: how are humans meant to live in the time of the machine? Benasayag is a fascinating character in his own right — psychoanalyst, victim of torture by the Argentine junta and one-time resistance fighter. He accepts algorithms are inevitable, but what does their rise mean for such essential concepts as democracy and free will? * Independent.ie *
£9.49
Verso Books Future Histories: What Ada Lovelace, Tom Paine,
Book SynopsisWhen we talk about technology we always talk about the future - which makes it hard to figure out how to get there. In Future Histories, Lizzie O'Shea argues that we need to stop looking forward and start looking backwards. Weaving together histories of computing and social movements with modern theories of the mind, society, and self, O'Shea constructs a "usable past" that can help us determine our digital future. What, she asks, can the Paris Commune tell us about earlier experiments in sharing resources-like the Internet-in common? Can debates over equal digital access be guided by Tom Paine's theories of democratic, economic redistribution? And, how is Elon Musk not a visionary but a throwback to Victorian-era utopians? In engaging, sparkling prose, O'Shea shows us how very human our understanding of technology is, and what potential exists for struggle, for liberation, for art and poetry in our digital present. Future Histories is for all of us-makers, coders, hacktivists, Facebook-users, self-styled Luddites-who find ourselves in a brave new world.Trade ReviewBefore we became big data bundles for the lackeys of Dorsey, Jobs, Zuckerberg, and Bezos, to exploit, the digital revolution seemed to promise a democratic utopia, a commons in cyberspace not governed by neoliberal norms. Can we realize that revolutionary dream and stop desiring our own domination? Incredibly, yet thrillingly and plausibly, Lizzie O'Shea argues that, if only we can mobilize history to serve rather than enervate us, the answer is yes. -- Stuart JeffriesA thought-provoking text for readers looking to approach the subject [of digital technologies] from a well-informed ... perspective. * Engineering and Technology Magazine *Polemical and eclectic. * Choice *There's plenry of history in Future Histories, but the perspective is polemical and eclectic: a pinch of socialism, a dash of anarchism, relentless strictures on digital misconduct, and, throughout, a salutary call to use technology to fulfill humanity's potential. -- T. P. Johnson * Choice *In engaging, sparkling prose, O'Shea shows us how very human our understanding of technology is, and what potential exists for struggle, for liberation, for art and poetry in our digital present. * New Books Network *O'Shea's approach is avowedly episodic as she mines history for illuminating gems. -- Hettie O'brien * Times Literary Supplement *This insightful, provocative book is an intellectual kaleidoscope that sits effortlessly at the crossroads between investigation, history and radical philosophy. * Victorian Premier's Literary Award panel *A startlingly original book, one that belies comparison to most other books... Although it is not, I would argue, a fair expectation that writers who analyse or expose societal problems should also be the ones to prescribe the remedies to solve them, this hefty task is one that O'Shea takes on with aplomb and considerable skill. -- Ruby Hamad * Meanjin *
£18.04
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Internet City: People, Companies, Systems and
Book SynopsisAs the Internet develops, on top of earlier urban communications, facilities and media, it is becoming the site of urban communications on an unprecedented scale. Exploring the history of the Internet, from pre-conception to the possibilities of an internet-based future, The Internet City explores ways in which the Internet and urban life intersect. The book interprets how the contemporary city is becoming fully based on Internet technologies in all of its major dimensions: the daily activities of urbanites and urban companies, the operations of urban systems, and the functioning of upcoming driverless vehicles. With particular focus on the ways in which people routinely consume urban services via the Internet, Aharon Kellerman examines how they are simultaneously present in physical and digital spaces. Urban geographers and urban planners will benefit from the detailed information on how the cityscape will be altered in the near future by the introduction of internet-based autonomous vehicles. City policy makers will also find this a useful tool to explore how and why policies may need to be updated in accordance with the rising importance of the Internet in the urban sphere.Trade Review‘This is a fascinating book which opens to the reader a wide view of the Internet development, applications and potential impacts on urbanities.’ -- Eran Ben-Elia, Geography Research Forum<>‘Those looking for an introduction to the impacts of the Internet on society and within cities will find the book useful. Kellerman has provided a public service in marshalling the basic historical and contemporary data about how the Internet has become embedded in our lives in multiple ways, and in showing us in an organized fashion some of the main concerns about how AVs may change cities.’ -- Daniel G Chatman, Journal of Urban Technology‘For more than 30 years Aharon Kellerman has chronicled the spatial implications of evolving communications and internet technologies culminating in his current volume The Internet City. . . The book is accessible to a wide audience and would find a place in undergraduate and graduate courses on information geography or urban planning, as well as be useful for urban planners, city managers and policy makers.’ -- Mark Wilson, Urban Analytics and City Science'As the internet revolution continues to reverberate through the global economy and daily life, urban life has become progressively more constituted around digital transactions. Kellerman has long been one of the most astute observers of this transformation. This volume not only covers the basics of how cyberspace has become woven into the contemporary world, such as cell phones and digital divides, it also breaks new ground by addressing topics that have received scant attention, such as autonomous vehicles. It offers a fecund series of insights into how people, firms, and places have been restructured by the ever-growing use of digital technologies. This volume will be useful to students and faculty alike, and of interest to anyone interested in how cyberspace and the analogue world have become shot through with each other.' --Barney Warf, University of Kansas, US'Computer networks and autonomous technologies continue to rapidly redefine the geography of the city. Kellerman has spent a lifetime reflecting on what this might mean and his recent book presents one of the most insightful pictures of this future to date. Essential reading for all those interested in how our future cities will be organised.' --Michael Batty, University College London, UKTable of ContentsContents: PART I URBAN CONNECTIVITY AND INFORMATIONAL ACTIVITIES 1. Introduction 2. Pre-Internet urban connectivity and informational activities 3. The Internet PART II URBAN INTERNET APPLICATIONS 4. The Internet for Individual users 5. The dual-space society 6. The Internet and companies 7. The Internet for urban systems 8. Autonomous vehicles (AVs) and the Internet PART III IMPLICATIONS OF URBAN INTERNET APPLICATIONS 9. Urban perspectives for the Internet-based city 10. Conclusion Index
£88.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Fundamental Rights Protection Online: The Future
Book SynopsisFundamental Rights Protection Online presents an in-depth analysis of national, supranational and international attempts at online speech regulation, illustrating how the law has been unsettled on how to treat intermediaries.In this book, expert contributors explore how problems ranging from disinformation to hate speech to copyright violations are framed and tackled though legislation, codes of conduct and judicial interpretation. The chapters discuss positive law developments in the intersection of intermediary liability and rights, considering both the history and current intellectual debates surrounding European and US legislative initiatives. In addition to examining how the European Union and individual European nations regulate speech online, the book also analyses the e-Commerce Directive, the case law of the European Court of Human Rights and principles established under the United Nations. It concludes that content regulation online is best captured by the notion of 'speech curation', involving both private and public actors. Taking a human rights approach to online speech regulation, this timely book will be critical reading for academics and students of law, particularly those with an interest in internet law, information law and human rights. Its exploration of intermediary liability and fundamental rights will also be beneficial for legal practitioners working in online rights protection.Trade Review‘Fundamental Rights Protection Online offers profoundly original insights into critical challenges for internet regulation. Petkova, Ojanen and the contributors call for the EU to overhaul the intermediary liability regime and to demand more responsibility from tech companies. Engaging, provocative and timely, this collection will shape critical policy discussions in the years ahead.' -- Marc Rotenberg, Centre for AI and Digital Policy, Michael Dukakis Institute, US'This volume presents diverse voices and options for addressing the challenges presented by media and business model convergence.' -- Chris Hoofnagle, University of California, Berkeley, US'New technologies of sharing information through online intermediaries can be quite democratizing, as people now have an unprecedented ability to express themselves to a worldwide audience. But there is a dark side to the rise of these technologies: privacy violations, harassment, hate speech, and other insidious dangers have greatly worsened. Fundamental Rights Protection Online is an insightful collection of essays that explores these issues from a European Union fundamental rights perspective. This is an essential volume for understanding how the EU and various member states are addressing intermediaries, free speech, and privacy issues.' -- Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, USTable of ContentsContents: Foreword: The Challenges of Change 1 Acknowledgments 2 IntroductionPreface: Fundamental Rights Protection Online: Curation v. Regulation? Bilyana Petkova and Tuomas Ojanen 5 Part I: Conceptual Issues 21 1. Metaphors and judicial frame: why legal imagination (also) matters in the protection of fundamental rights in the digital age Oreste Pollicino 21 2. Filter Bubble and Human Rights Christoph Bezemek 34 Part II: The National Law Approach 43 3. ‘What is illegal offline is also illegal online’ –The German Network Enforcement Act 2017 Thomas Wischmeyer 43 4. Protecting Liberal Democracy from Artificial Information: The French Proposal Kamel Ajji 67 5. Mambo Italiano: The Perilous Italian way to ISP liability Marco Bassini 92 6. A Consumer Protection Approach to Platform Content Moderation in the United States Mark MacCarthy 119 Part III: Toward a European Law Approach? 140 7. The scandal of intermediary: Acknowledging the both/and dispensation for regulating hybrid actors Sophie Stalla-Bourdillon and Robert Thorburn 140 8. Intermediaries in the case law of the Court of Justice of the EU: The interplay between liability exemptions and rules on IP protection Alberto Miglio 168 9. Self-Regulation of Fundamental Rights? The EU Code of Conduct on Hate Speech, related initiatives and beyond Teresa Quintel and Carsten Ullrich 182 10. EU proposal for a Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market: Compatibility of Draft Article 13 with the EU intermediary liability regime Aleksandra Kuczerawy 205 Part IV: Toward an International Law Approach? 220 11. The Liability of Internet Intermediaries and the European Court of Human Rights Marta Maroni 220 12. A Business and Human Rights Perspective for Internet Intermediaries – The Case for Human Rights Due Diligence Lia Heasman 242 Index
£116.00
Legend Press Ltd China's Media in the Emerging World Order
Book Synopsis
£17.00
Sacristy Press iJesus: The Culture of God in a Digital World
Book Synopsis
£11.69
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social
Book SynopsisThis insightful book discusses how states deploy frontier and digital technologies to manage and control migratory movements. Assessing the development of blockchain technologies for digital identities and cash transfer; artificial intelligence for smart borders, resettlement of refugees and assessing asylum applications; social media and mobile phone applications to track and surveil migrants, it critically examines the consequences of new technological developments and evaluates their impact on the rights of migrants and refugees.Chapters evaluate the technology-based public-private projects that govern migration globally and illustrate the political implications of these virtual borders. International contributors compare and contrast different forms of political expression, in both personal technologies, such as social media for refugees and smugglers, and automated decision-making algorithms used by states to enable migration governance. This timely book challenges hegemonic approach to migration governance and provides cases demonstrating the dangers of employing frontier technologies denying basic rights, liberties and agencies of migrants and refugees.Stepping into a contentious political climate for migrants and refugees, this provocative book is ideal reading for scholars and researchers of political science and public policy, particularly those focusing on migration and refugee studies. It will also benefit policymakers and practitioners dealing with migration, such as humanitarian NGOs, UN agencies and local authorities.Trade Review‘Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media presents sound, scrupulous research into the complexities of technology in migration.’ -- Magda Rodríguez Dehli, Routed‘A unique and seminal collection of seven erudite and informative contributions by experts in the field, Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media must be considered a core and essential addition to college and university library collections, and essential reading for students, academia, political activists, governmental policymakers, and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject.’ -- Paul T. Vogel, Midwest Book Review'The book is a timely contribution on how digital technology is used in the establishment, management and enforcement of physical and virtual borders. It offers a multi-faceted view into digital technologies used in the context of migration, offering insights into the potential of these technologies, but also exposing the risks, be it through direct use of technology, its problematic conceptualization, or through inequalities in accessing digital resources.' -- Albert Ali Salah, Utrecht University, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media 1 Emre Eren Korkmaz 2 Self-sovereign identity and forced migration: slippery terms and the refugee data apparatus 10 Margie Cheesman and Aiden Slavin 3 Digital identification for the vulnerable: continuities across a century of identification technologies 33 Aiden Slavin 4 Politics of technology: the use of artificial intelligence by US and Canadian immigration agencies and their impacts on human rights 52 Erin Harris and Roxana Akhmetova 5 Migration and smuggling across virtual borders: a European Union case study of internet governance and immigration politics 73 Johanna Bankston 6 Irregular mobility and network capital: the case of the Afghanistan-Iran smuggling route 98 Ruta Nimkar, Emily Savage and Abdullah Mohammadi 7 What shapes the attitude of the European Parliament voters toward migration? A comparative case study on Finland, Hungary and Bulgaria 120 Deniz Yetkin Aker Index
£77.90
Multilingual Matters Creating Digital Literacy Spaces for Multilingual
Book SynopsisThis book argues for the value of digital literacy in the multilingual writing classroom. Against the background of huge changes in literacy practices prompted by online communication, and a growing acceptance of a broader definition of academic literacy that encompasses multimodality, the book examines the relationship between digital and print literacies and addresses the design of literacy spaces for multilingual classrooms. The author critically evaluates the latest developments in the use of technology in multilingual writing spaces, and focuses on the role of teachers in their design; it also addresses areas that are not often discussed in relation to multilingual students, from blogging to publishing and intellectual property. The book will help teachers meet the challenges created by rapidly shifting technology, as well as making an innovative contribution to research on multilingual writing classrooms.Trade ReviewThis well-researched book admirably synthesizes the multifaceted threads of changing conceptions of literacy and awareness of the growing complexity and variety of potential learning spaces into a cohesive narrative. Teachers involved in any aspect of bringing developing technologies and their associated social spaces to bear on teaching a language will enjoy and greatly benefit from this book. * Vance Stevens, Founder and Coordinator of Learning2gether.net, Malaysia *In Bloch’s latest book, he does what he does best: helps us see digital writing spaces in historical and contemporary theoretical perspective, while also walking us through a wealth of pedagogical applications and implications. What we gain is neither a utopian nor a dystopian window on technology-for-literacy purposes but instead a multifaceted realistic view that can inform the decision-making that we, as literacy teachers and users, are almost inevitably faced with in an increasingly digitally-dominant era. * Diane D. Belcher, Georgia State University, USA *Table of ContentsChapter 1. Technological Spaces and Teaching and Learning to Write Chapter 2. Bringing Students’ Voices into the Public Sphere: Blogging in the Debate over Plagiarism and the Use of Intellectual Property Chapter 3. Multimodality as a Digital Space Chapter 4. MOOCs as a Digital Literacy Space Chapter 5. Flipping the Multilingual Composition Classroom Chapter 6. The Promise of Open Access Journals for L2 Publishing Chapter 7. Teaching Writing in the Publishing Space Chapter 8. What We Talk about When We Talk about Digital Literacy Spaces References
£31.46
Multilingual Matters Creating Digital Literacy Spaces for Multilingual
Book SynopsisThis book argues for the value of digital literacy in the multilingual writing classroom. Against the background of huge changes in literacy practices prompted by online communication, and a growing acceptance of a broader definition of academic literacy that encompasses multimodality, the book examines the relationship between digital and print literacies and addresses the design of literacy spaces for multilingual classrooms. The author critically evaluates the latest developments in the use of technology in multilingual writing spaces, and focuses on the role of teachers in their design; it also addresses areas that are not often discussed in relation to multilingual students, from blogging to publishing and intellectual property. The book will help teachers meet the challenges created by rapidly shifting technology, as well as making an innovative contribution to research on multilingual writing classrooms.Trade ReviewThis well-researched book admirably synthesizes the multifaceted threads of changing conceptions of literacy and awareness of the growing complexity and variety of potential learning spaces into a cohesive narrative. Teachers involved in any aspect of bringing developing technologies and their associated social spaces to bear on teaching a language will enjoy and greatly benefit from this book. * Vance Stevens, Founder and Coordinator of Learning2gether.net, Malaysia *In Bloch’s latest book, he does what he does best: helps us see digital writing spaces in historical and contemporary theoretical perspective, while also walking us through a wealth of pedagogical applications and implications. What we gain is neither a utopian nor a dystopian window on technology-for-literacy purposes but instead a multifaceted realistic view that can inform the decision-making that we, as literacy teachers and users, are almost inevitably faced with in an increasingly digitally-dominant era. * Diane D. Belcher, Georgia State University, USA *Table of ContentsChapter 1. Technological Spaces and Teaching and Learning to Write Chapter 2. Bringing Students’ Voices into the Public Sphere: Blogging in the Debate over Plagiarism and the Use of Intellectual Property Chapter 3. Multimodality as a Digital Space Chapter 4. MOOCs as a Digital Literacy Space Chapter 5. Flipping the Multilingual Composition Classroom Chapter 6. The Promise of Open Access Journals for L2 Publishing Chapter 7. Teaching Writing in the Publishing Space Chapter 8. What We Talk about When We Talk about Digital Literacy Spaces References
£98.96
Multilingual Matters Rethinking Language Use in Digital Africa:
Book SynopsisThis book challenges the view that digital communication in Africa is limited and relatively unsophisticated and questions the assumption that digital communication has a damaging effect on indigenous African languages. The book applies the principles of Digital African Multilingualism (DAM) in which there are no rigid boundaries between languages. The book charts a way forward for African languages where greater attention is paid to what speakers do with the languages rather than what the languages look like, and offers several models for language policy and planning based on horizontal and user-based multilingualism. The chapters demonstrate how digital communication is being used to form and sustain communication in many kinds of online groups, including for political activism and creating poetry, and offer a paradigm of language merging online that provides a practical blueprint for the decolonization of African languages through digital platforms. This book is open access under a CC BY NC ND licence.Trade ReviewThis is a timely and welcome addition to the burgeoning body of scholarship on language and communication in times of crises. It draws our attention to the importance of digital literacies and e-learning platforms in the communication of critical health information in marginalised multilingual communities. Measured in its aspirations yet far-reaching in policy implications, this volume deserves a space on the bookshelf of any serious scholar or student of applied and educational linguistics. * Finex Ndhlovu, University of New England, Australia *Makalela and White have assembled a timely and powerful volume that addresses the global reliance on digital communication. The multimodal studies from Sub-Saharan Africa illustrate the disrupting power of technology to break down linguistic borders around African languages imposed by colonization, and to empower speakers to translanguage and create connections across the diaspora. * Tatyana Kleyn, The City College of New York, CUNY, USA *This book breaks new ground in addressing how African languages and cultures are influenced and changed in digital communication. It explores multilingual practices in digital spaces and the use of digital technologies for performing arts. This is a must-read for anyone interested in digital communication in Africa and the diaspora. * Felix K. Ameka, Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, The Netherlands *Theoretically and through its research examples Rethinking Language Use in Digital Africa is of value not just to students of language and society in Africa but to researchers interested in the theory and practice of digital communication and the study of minority languages around the world. -- Michael Carrier, Highdale Consulting, UK * Training, Language and Culture, Volume 5 Issue 3, 2021 *[This] is a timely book that describes digital communication in Africa by offering examples of digital communication in Africa during the pandemic. This book discusses the priorities, difficulties, and innovative practices experienced during this period. * Dallel Sarnou, Abdelhamid Ibn Badis University, Algeria, Language in Society 52:1 (2023) *Table of ContentsContributors Introduction Part 1: Multilingual Practices 1. Leketi Makalela: Multilingual Literacies and Technology in Africa: Towards Ubuntu Digital Translanguaging 2. Epimaque Niyibizi, Cyprien Niyomugabo & Juliet Perumal: Translanguaging in the Rwandan Social Media: New Meaning Making in a Changing Society Part 2: Linguistic and Cultural Maintenance 3. Elvis ResCue & G. Edzordzi Agbozo: Creating Translated Interfaces: The Representations of African Languages and Cultures in Digital Media 4. Kirsty Rowan: Mdocumentation: Combining New Technologies and Language Documentation to Promote Multilingualism in Nubian Heritage Language Learners of the Diaspora Part 3: The Effects of Communication Outside Africa 5. Sarah Ogbay & Goodith White: A Network of Anger and Hope: An Investigation of Communication on a Feminist Activist Facebook Website, The Network of Eritrean Women (RENEW) 6. Bonny Norton: Identity, Language and Literacy in an African Digital Landscape 7. Susanna Sacks: Networked Poetics: WhatsApp Poetry Groups and Malawian Aesthetic Networks Part 4: Language Change 8. Abdulmalik Yusuf Ofemile: Human–Agent Interaction: L1-mode Intelligent Software Agents Instructing Nigerian L2 Speakers of English During Assembly Tasks Conclusion Index
£28.45
Multilingual Matters Rethinking Language Use in Digital Africa:
Book SynopsisThis book challenges the view that digital communication in Africa is limited and relatively unsophisticated and questions the assumption that digital communication has a damaging effect on indigenous African languages. The book applies the principles of Digital African Multilingualism (DAM) in which there are no rigid boundaries between languages. The book charts a way forward for African languages where greater attention is paid to what speakers do with the languages rather than what the languages look like, and offers several models for language policy and planning based on horizontal and user-based multilingualism. The chapters demonstrate how digital communication is being used to form and sustain communication in many kinds of online groups, including for political activism and creating poetry, and offer a paradigm of language merging online that provides a practical blueprint for the decolonization of African languages through digital platforms. This book is open access under a CC BY NC ND licence.Trade ReviewThis is a timely and welcome addition to the burgeoning body of scholarship on language and communication in times of crises. It draws our attention to the importance of digital literacies and e-learning platforms in the communication of critical health information in marginalised multilingual communities. Measured in its aspirations yet far-reaching in policy implications, this volume deserves a space on the bookshelf of any serious scholar or student of applied and educational linguistics. * Finex Ndhlovu, University of New England, Australia *Makalela and White have assembled a timely and powerful volume that addresses the global reliance on digital communication. The multimodal studies from Sub-Saharan Africa illustrate the disrupting power of technology to break down linguistic borders around African languages imposed by colonization, and to empower speakers to translanguage and create connections across the diaspora. * Tatyana Kleyn, The City College of New York, CUNY, USA *This book breaks new ground in addressing how African languages and cultures are influenced and changed in digital communication. It explores multilingual practices in digital spaces and the use of digital technologies for performing arts. This is a must-read for anyone interested in digital communication in Africa and the diaspora. * Felix K. Ameka, Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, The Netherlands *Theoretically and through its research examples Rethinking Language Use in Digital Africa is of value not just to students of language and society in Africa but to researchers interested in the theory and practice of digital communication and the study of minority languages around the world. -- Michael Carrier, Highdale Consulting, UK * Training, Language and Culture, Volume 5 Issue 3, 2021 *[This] is a timely book that describes digital communication in Africa by offering examples of digital communication in Africa during the pandemic. This book discusses the priorities, difficulties, and innovative practices experienced during this period. * Dallel Sarnou, Abdelhamid Ibn Badis University, Algeria, Language in Society 52:1 (2023) *Table of ContentsContributors Introduction Part 1: Multilingual Practices 1. Leketi Makalela: Multilingual Literacies and Technology in Africa: Towards Ubuntu Digital Translanguaging 2. Epimaque Niyibizi, Cyprien Niyomugabo & Juliet Perumal: Translanguaging in the Rwandan Social Media: New Meaning Making in a Changing Society Part 2: Linguistic and Cultural Maintenance 3. Elvis ResCue & G. Edzordzi Agbozo: Creating Translated Interfaces: The Representations of African Languages and Cultures in Digital Media 4. Kirsty Rowan: Mdocumentation: Combining New Technologies and Language Documentation to Promote Multilingualism in Nubian Heritage Language Learners of the Diaspora Part 3: The Effects of Communication Outside Africa 5. Sarah Ogbay & Goodith White: A Network of Anger and Hope: An Investigation of Communication on a Feminist Activist Facebook Website, The Network of Eritrean Women (RENEW) 6. Bonny Norton: Identity, Language and Literacy in an African Digital Landscape 7. Susanna Sacks: Networked Poetics: WhatsApp Poetry Groups and Malawian Aesthetic Networks Part 4: Language Change 8. Abdulmalik Yusuf Ofemile: Human–Agent Interaction: L1-mode Intelligent Software Agents Instructing Nigerian L2 Speakers of English During Assembly Tasks Conclusion Index
£89.96
Multilingual Matters Multimodal Literacies in Young Emergent
Book SynopsisThis book presents research focused on young emergent bilingual children’s multimodal meaning-making processes in diverse cultural and linguistic settings. Chapters draw on a range of theoretical frameworks and expand on traditional notions of literacy, especially for students who are working to learn English as a new language. The insights into original research studies will help readers understand the many avenues that one can take as a practitioner in order to ensure that student assets are built upon to promote positive literate identities and learning experiences and, ultimately, to promote literacy success for diverse learners. Each chapter includes practical pedagogical recommendations and implications for teachers that can immediately be applied to classrooms, making the book an essential resource for using multiple modes to teach literacy with diverse student populations.Trade ReviewWith theoretical prowess and a close eye on practice, this collection of carefully edited research honors the vibrancy of linguistic, semiotic, and material dexterity at work among bilingual children. Offering a global perspective, it reinvigorates our desire to learn from what truly becomes and what is possible in bilingual learning spaces. * Angie Zapata, University of Missouri, USA *This book provides a sensitive and ground breaking account of bilingual children’s multimodal literacy practices bringing together the very best and most exciting work in the field. It traces a journey that immerses the reader in a vibrant and dynamic understanding of the arc of bilingual children’s multimodal and multilingual productions across school and beyond. This is pedagogical work at its best – research informed, playful, inventive and powerfully concerned with social justice in literacy and language education. * Kate Pahl, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK *This volume is a kaleidoscope of multimodal multilingual literacies from various contexts and nations. These original studies with culturally and linguistically diverse student populations help us watch our children read beyond the print text and learn from our children. It is an inspiring read for researchers, teachers, and parents. * Yang Wang, University of South Carolina, USA *Table of ContentsContributors Foreword Ling Hao and Sally Brown: Introduction Chapter 1. Qi Si, Tracey Hodges and Julianne Coleman: A Synthesis of How Multimodal Literacies Impact Emergent Bilingual Students’ Literacy and Cultural Identities Part 1: Preschool Chapter 2. Karen Wohlwend, Pengtong Qu, Jill Allison Scott and Carmen Liliana Medina: Multimodal Literacies at the Train Table: Supporting Young Emergent Bilinguals through Play Chapter 3. Buyi Wang and Chunhua Dai: 'Can I "Mai" that "Bao"?': An Emergent Bilingual’s Multimodal Meaning-Making Practice Chapter 4. Colleen E. Whittingham and Emily Brown Hoffman: Multimodal Narrative Composition in Urban Preschool[ed] Places: What Counts as Narrative and Whose Narrative Counts? Chapter 5. Ysaaca Axelrod, Lorraine Falchi and Marjorie Siegel: Learning from Emergent Bilinguals: Mobilizing Translanguaging and Multimodality to Reimagine School Literacy Curricular Spaces Chapter 6. Xiaodi Zhou, Zhuo Li and Shih-Fen Yeh: Teaching English and Solar Terms through a Multimodal Approach to Young Chinese Children Chapter 7. Cláudia Hilsdorf Rocha, Fernanda Coelho Liberali and Antonieta Heyden Megale: For a Politically Engaged and Socioculturally Just Language Education through Critical Multimodal Literacy in Brazilian Contexts Part 2: Kindergarten Chapter 8. Laura Schall-Leckrone: La Tortuga Está Tiptoeing: Multimodal Storytelling in a Bilingual Kindergarten Chapter 9. Laura Ascenzi-Moreno, Cecilia M. Espinosa and Alison Lehner-Quam: Move, Play, Language: A Translanguaged Multimodal Approach to Literacies with Young Emergent Bilinguals Chapter 10. Ruth Flores Bañuelos and Leslie C. Banes: 'Being Bilingual is Cool': Co-Constructing Bilingual Identities with Dual Language Kindergarteners Part 3: Primary Grades Chapter 11. Adriana Alvarez: Multimodality as a Pathway to Bilingual Learners’ Funds of Knowledge Chapter 12. Heidi R. Bacon and Moneerah Al Jabr: Creative Creations: Self-Authoring Multimodal Stories Chapter 13. Ted Kesler: Teaching a Picturebook Author Study to Support Narrative Composing Processes of Emergent Bilinguals Chapter 14. Sara Hawley: A STEERS Model of Literacy to Tackle the Challenges of the Digital for Young Bilingual Learners Chapter 15. Aijuan Cun and Mary B. McVee: Listening to the Stories of Refugee Children from Burma: A Positioning and Multimodal study Chapter 16. Vivian E. Presiado and Brittany L. Frieson: Black Girls' Multimodal Manifestations: Exploring the Multimodal Flexibility of Black Language in a Dual Language Bilingual Education Chapter 17. Ana Taboada Barber, Susan Lutz-Klauda, Mayra Cruz and Jerae Kelly: Theory of Mind: A Missing Piece in Understanding Emergent Bilinguals' Comprehension of Multimodal Narrative Texts Chapter 18. Marisa Ferraro and Kristin Bengtson Mendoza: Cultivating Language and Identity Through Multimodal Literacies: Back to the StoryBoard Chapter 19. Sally Brown and Ling Hao: Legos: A Multimodal Approach to Storytelling for a Young African Emergent Bilingual Part 4: Out-of-School Contexts Chapter 20. Junyi Yang and Joshua Lawrence: Multimodal Literacies at Home: A Survey Study of Chinese-Norwegian Bilingual Children Chapter 21. Kyungjin Hwang: How Young Emergent Bilinguals Rely on Multiple Modes to Make Meaning in Digital Multimodal Texts Chapter 22. Min-Seok Choi: Emergent Bilingual Families’ Involvement Strategies for Scientific Sense-Making in a Science Museum: A Multimodal Interaction Analysis Chapter 23. Sally Brown and Ling Hao: New Directions Index
£35.96
Multilingual Matters Multimodal Literacies in Young Emergent
Book SynopsisThis book presents research focused on young emergent bilingual children’s multimodal meaning-making processes in diverse cultural and linguistic settings. Chapters draw on a range of theoretical frameworks and expand on traditional notions of literacy, especially for students who are working to learn English as a new language. The insights into original research studies will help readers understand the many avenues that one can take as a practitioner in order to ensure that student assets are built upon to promote positive literate identities and learning experiences and, ultimately, to promote literacy success for diverse learners. Each chapter includes practical pedagogical recommendations and implications for teachers that can immediately be applied to classrooms, making the book an essential resource for using multiple modes to teach literacy with diverse student populations.Trade ReviewWith theoretical prowess and a close eye on practice, this collection of carefully edited research honors the vibrancy of linguistic, semiotic, and material dexterity at work among bilingual children. Offering a global perspective, it reinvigorates our desire to learn from what truly becomes and what is possible in bilingual learning spaces. * Angie Zapata, University of Missouri, USA *This book provides a sensitive and ground breaking account of bilingual children’s multimodal literacy practices bringing together the very best and most exciting work in the field. It traces a journey that immerses the reader in a vibrant and dynamic understanding of the arc of bilingual children’s multimodal and multilingual productions across school and beyond. This is pedagogical work at its best – research informed, playful, inventive and powerfully concerned with social justice in literacy and language education. * Kate Pahl, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK *This volume is a kaleidoscope of multimodal multilingual literacies from various contexts and nations. These original studies with culturally and linguistically diverse student populations help us watch our children read beyond the print text and learn from our children. It is an inspiring read for researchers, teachers, and parents. * Yang Wang, University of South Carolina, USA *Table of ContentsContributors Foreword Ling Hao and Sally Brown: Introduction Chapter 1. Qi Si, Tracey Hodges and Julianne Coleman: A Synthesis of How Multimodal Literacies Impact Emergent Bilingual Students’ Literacy and Cultural Identities Part 1: Preschool Chapter 2. Karen Wohlwend, Pengtong Qu, Jill Allison Scott and Carmen Liliana Medina: Multimodal Literacies at the Train Table: Supporting Young Emergent Bilinguals through Play Chapter 3. Buyi Wang and Chunhua Dai: 'Can I "Mai" that "Bao"?': An Emergent Bilingual’s Multimodal Meaning-Making Practice Chapter 4. Colleen E. Whittingham and Emily Brown Hoffman: Multimodal Narrative Composition in Urban Preschool[ed] Places: What Counts as Narrative and Whose Narrative Counts? Chapter 5. Ysaaca Axelrod, Lorraine Falchi and Marjorie Siegel: Learning from Emergent Bilinguals: Mobilizing Translanguaging and Multimodality to Reimagine School Literacy Curricular Spaces Chapter 6. Xiaodi Zhou, Zhuo Li and Shih-Fen Yeh: Teaching English and Solar Terms through a Multimodal Approach to Young Chinese Children Chapter 7. Cláudia Hilsdorf Rocha, Fernanda Coelho Liberali and Antonieta Heyden Megale: For a Politically Engaged and Socioculturally Just Language Education through Critical Multimodal Literacy in Brazilian Contexts Part 2: Kindergarten Chapter 8. Laura Schall-Leckrone: La Tortuga Está Tiptoeing: Multimodal Storytelling in a Bilingual Kindergarten Chapter 9. Laura Ascenzi-Moreno, Cecilia M. Espinosa and Alison Lehner-Quam: Move, Play, Language: A Translanguaged Multimodal Approach to Literacies with Young Emergent Bilinguals Chapter 10. Ruth Flores Bañuelos and Leslie C. Banes: 'Being Bilingual is Cool': Co-Constructing Bilingual Identities with Dual Language Kindergarteners Part 3: Primary Grades Chapter 11. Adriana Alvarez: Multimodality as a Pathway to Bilingual Learners’ Funds of Knowledge Chapter 12. Heidi R. Bacon and Moneerah Al Jabr: Creative Creations: Self-Authoring Multimodal Stories Chapter 13. Ted Kesler: Teaching a Picturebook Author Study to Support Narrative Composing Processes of Emergent Bilinguals Chapter 14. Sara Hawley: A STEERS Model of Literacy to Tackle the Challenges of the Digital for Young Bilingual Learners Chapter 15. Aijuan Cun and Mary B. McVee: Listening to the Stories of Refugee Children from Burma: A Positioning and Multimodal study Chapter 16. Vivian E. Presiado and Brittany L. Frieson: Black Girls' Multimodal Manifestations: Exploring the Multimodal Flexibility of Black Language in a Dual Language Bilingual Education Chapter 17. Ana Taboada Barber, Susan Lutz-Klauda, Mayra Cruz and Jerae Kelly: Theory of Mind: A Missing Piece in Understanding Emergent Bilinguals' Comprehension of Multimodal Narrative Texts Chapter 18. Marisa Ferraro and Kristin Bengtson Mendoza: Cultivating Language and Identity Through Multimodal Literacies: Back to the StoryBoard Chapter 19. Sally Brown and Ling Hao: Legos: A Multimodal Approach to Storytelling for a Young African Emergent Bilingual Part 4: Out-of-School Contexts Chapter 20. Junyi Yang and Joshua Lawrence: Multimodal Literacies at Home: A Survey Study of Chinese-Norwegian Bilingual Children Chapter 21. Kyungjin Hwang: How Young Emergent Bilinguals Rely on Multiple Modes to Make Meaning in Digital Multimodal Texts Chapter 22. Min-Seok Choi: Emergent Bilingual Families’ Involvement Strategies for Scientific Sense-Making in a Science Museum: A Multimodal Interaction Analysis Chapter 23. Sally Brown and Ling Hao: New Directions Index
£107.96
Emerald Publishing Limited The Emerald Handbook of Computer-Mediated
Book SynopsisJoining a thriving field of new media, this collective volume authored by global academics features important research by thought leaders within computer-mediated communication (CMC) and social media. Featuring 40 comprehensive chapters of new research that focuses on what is new, relevant, and cutting edge in the areas of CMC and social media, authors critically explore topics ranging from social media theories to civil rights. Divided into three parts, the handbook begins with theory and methods, which sets the foundation for the text and then moves into the applicability of strategy, tactics, and measurement. The final focus is toward the future of CMC and social media and its impact on the study and practice of communication. Uniquely relating social media communication research to its computer-mediated communication foundation, as well as digital and emerging media trends, this handbook is an indispensable resource whether you're a graduate student or a seasoned practitioner.Table of ContentsPart One. Emerging Media Trends in Theory and Research Chapter 1. Introduction: Connecting CMC and Social Media Research; Jeremy Harris Lipschultz, Karen Freberg, and Regina Luttrell Chapter 2. Social Media Theories; Carolyn A. Lin and David J. Atkin Chapter 3. Electronic Word-of-Mouth (eWOM) and Social Media; Nicky Chang Bi and Ruonan Zhang Chapter 4. Unobtrusive Observational Approaches to Studying the Texting Life of Couples: A Case Study of Interpersonal Conflict; Miriam Brinberg, Rachel Reymann Vanderbilt, and Denise Haunani Solomon Chapter 5. How Social Media Serve As a Super Spreader of Misinformation, Disinformation and Conspiracy Theories Regarding Health Crises; Thomas J. Johnson, Ryan Wallace, and Taeyoung Lee Chapter 6. Global Culture, Power and Health Communication: India Fights Corona On the Battlefield of Social Media Platforms; Deepti Ganapathy Chapter 7. The COVID 19 Infodemic: Algorithmic Gatekeeping, Confirmation Bias, and Social Identity; T. Phillip Madison, Kyun David Kim, and William R. Davie Chapter 8. Mourning Using Social Media: The New Frontier for Death Communication; Jensen Moore Chapter 9. Saving Face: Theorizing Arab Women’s Emerging Self-(re)presentations on Instagram; Zoe Hurley Chapter 10. Finding Love Online: An Overview and Future Directions for Research on Online Dating; Brianna L. Lane and David J. Roaché Chapter 11. A Textual Analysis of Online Asexual Representation and Visibility on Reddit; Kyle Webster Chapter 12. Gamification, Tinder-effect and Tinder-fatigue: Dating as a CMC Experience; Olga Solovyeva and Alexander V. Laskin Chapter 13. #MoreLatinosInNews: A Call for Representation; Teresa Puente Chapter 14. News Agenda Setting in Social Media Era: Twitter as Alternative News Source for Citizen Journalism; Yousef Aldaihani and Jae-Hwa Shin Chapter 15. QAnon: The Networks of Misinformation and Conspiracy Theories on Social Media; Shugofa Dastgeer and Rashmi Thapaliya Chapter 16. Emerging Trends in Computer-Mediated Communication and Social Media in Sport: Theory & Practice; Frauke Hachtmann Part Two. Social Media and CMC Applied Trends Chapter 17. An examination of influencer-brand relationship: Implications and future directions for influencer marketing; Brandi Watkins Chapter 18. Nano- & Micro-Influencers; Arthur D. Soto-Vásquez and Nadia Jimenez Chapter 19. Influencer Marketing and Consumer Well-Being: From Source Characteristics to Social Media Anxiety and Addiction; Juan Mundel, Jing Yang, and Anan Wan Chapter 20. True Biz Deaf: An exploration of how deaf creators use TikTok; Edward H. Bart IV, Arlinda Boland, Summer Shelton, and Teri Del Rosso Chapter 21. Cancel Culture: A career vulture amongst influencers on social media; Tatiana Schwirblat, Karen Freberg, and Laura Freberg Chapter 22. The Transition of 24/7 Trolls, Bullies, and Intimidation Through Social Media; Sabrina Page Chapter 23. Integrating the Barcelona Principles 3.0 Into Online Gaming Brand Ambassadorships; Kristie Byrum Chapter 24. The Evolution of Social Media Management as Professional Practice; Karen Sutherland Chapter 25. Social Media Practices of Independent Sports Podcasters; Matthew P. Taylor Chapter 26. Healthcare and Aging Adults: Building Beneficial Relationships through Social Media; Elise Assaf Chapter 27: Schools’ use of social media for multicultural community engagement: A case study of Facebook use by government schools in Australia; Lauren Gorfinkel and Tanya Muscat Part Three. New Communication Technologies, Directions in Theory and Practice Chapter 28. When AI Meets IoT: AioT; Adrienne A. Wallace Chapter 29. Excellence In Digital Storytelling: Exploring How Best Practices Are Embraced By Professional Communicators; Ashika Theyyil Chapter 30. Digital Misinformation & Disinformation: The Global War of Words; Jeongwon Yang and Regina Luttrell Chapter 31. Algorithms, Analytics, and Metrics: Is Audience Interaction Reshaping Algorithmic Gatekeeping in the Marketplace of Attention?; Heidi A. Makady, William R. Davie, and Kenneth A. Fischer Chapter 32. Agency in Computer-Mediated Communication: Bots and U.S. Political Elections; Cameron W. Piercy, Ryan S. Bisel, and Jeffrey W. Treem Chapter 33. A Computational Text Analysis Study on Marijuana Edible Product Use on Twitter; Hyejin Kim, Tao (Tony) Deng, Juan Mundel, and Jennifer Honeycutt Chapter 34. Call and Response: A System for Converting Interactive Data into Money and Sound; Carolyn Malachi Chapter 35. Design Thinking As A Course Design Methodology for Teaching Social Media & Digital Analytics: A Qualitative Exploratory Case Study; Jana Duckett and Janice Smith Chapter 36. Artificial Intelligence in Public Relations: Role and Implication; Alexander Buhmann and Candace White Chapter 37. Is It Broken or Just Bruised? Evaluating AI and Its Ethical Implications Within the PR and Healthcare Industries; Jamie Ward and Alisa Agozzino Chapter 38. Artificial Intelligence and Changing Ethical Landscapes in Social Media and Computer-Mediated Communication: Considering the Role of Communication Professionals; Lukasz Swiatek, Chris Galloway, Marina Vujnovic, and Dean Kruckeberg Chapter 39. Artificial Intelligence: The Dark Side, Ethics, and Implications; Christopher McCollough, Adrienne A. Wallace, and Regina Luttrell Chapter 40. Future Trends of CMC and Social Media Research; Jeremy Harris Lipschultz, Karen Freberg, and Regina Luttrell
£159.59
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Smart-Tech Society: Convenience, Control, and
Book SynopsisInformed by the latest theoretical developments in studies of the social impacts of digital technology, Smart-Tech Society provides an empirically grounded and conceptually informed analysis of the impacts and paradoxes of smart-technology.While making life more convenient, smart-tech has also been associated with a loss of privacy and control over decision-making autonomy. Mark Whitehead and William Collier provide a critical analysis of the lived experience of smart-technology, presenting stories of varied social engagements with digital platforms and devices. Chapters explore the myriad contexts in and through which smart-tech insinuates itself within everyday life, the benefits it brings, and the processes through which it is being resisted. Detailed case studies explore the impacts of smart-technology across a broad range of fields including personal health, work, social life, urban management, and politics.Presenting new empirical evidence and analytical perspectives on the relationships between humans and smart-tech, this book will be of interest to academics and students in the fields of sociology, political science, human geography, and technology studies.Trade Review‘The pages of this book take the reader on a perceptive and revealing journey through the smart-tech society. Bringing clarity to these disorientating and far-reaching transformations, it offers guidance, understanding and an irresistible call to engage with how the future might yet be shaped.’ -- David Beer, University of York, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. The Smart-Tech Revolution 2. Analysing the smart-tech society 3. Prediction, personalisation, and the data self 4. Behaviour and freedom 5. The smart body—from cyborgs to the quantified self 6. Smart working and the corporation 7. Smart-tech states 8. Dumbing down—recalibrating our relations with smart technology 9. Conclusion References Index
£89.30
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Crime and Technology
Book SynopsisExamining the consequences of technology-driven lifestyles for both crime commission and victimization, this comprehensive Handbook provides an overview of a broad array of techno-crimes as well as exploring critical issues concerning the criminal justice system’s response to technology-facilitated criminal activity.The Handbook adopts a unique three-fold typology of technology-enabled crime: techno-crime committed by professional criminals (crime as work), techno-crime committed in traditional workplace settings (crime at work), and techno-crime committed by individuals outside of traditional workplace settings (crime after work.) Chapters explore an extensive range of criminal activities facilitated by the digital age, from embezzlement, financial fraud, corporate espionage, phishing, and ransomware to identity theft, hacking, cyber terrorism, and internet sex and hate crimes. Looking to the future, the Handbook considers timely questions posed by our continued reliance on information technology, including whether we are in danger of becoming a global surveillance state and how we might prevent the facilitation of cyber terrorism by social media giants.This dynamic Handbook will be an invaluable resource for scholars and students interested in criminology, digital sociology, terrorism and security, and surveillance studies. Offering practical insights on the need for a coordinated global techno-crime control strategy, it will serve as a resource for policymakers seeking cutting edge solutions to the growing problem of techno-crime.Trade Review‘This pioneering volume must be in the library of any scholar or practitioner concerned with the radical upending of crime and responses to it brought by new information technologies. Never in the history of criminology have changes come so quickly, nor been so poorly understood. The book offers a cornucopia of concepts, data and constructive suggestions to help understand and respond thoughtfully to the challenges.’ -- Gary T. Marx, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US‘The Handbook's 23 chapters, and engaging introduction, address important underlying issues, such as the impact of technology on changes in our lifestyles, the problem of global surveillance of online activity as a control strategy, and the striking lack of success of current prevention and control efforts thus far. In sum, the Handbook provides an interesting and comprehensive assessment of where technology has brought us, and the need for more thoughtful approaches to techno-crime prevention.’ -- Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University, USTable of ContentsContents: Techno-crime cause, prevention, and control: issues to consider 1 Don Hummer and James M. Byrne PART I TECHNO-CRIME AS WORK 1 Hook, line, and sinker: the mechanics of fraud 17 Max M. Houck 2 Identity theft and financial loss 38 Don Hummer and Donald J. Rebovich 3 Phishing for profit 54 Eric Chan-Tin and Loretta J. Stalans 4 Advance fee scams 72 Claire Seungeun Lee, Juan Merizalde and Katelyn L. Greer 5 Ransomware 86 Thomas S. Hyslip and George W. Burruss 6 Online health/drug and COVID-19 fraud 105 Claire Seungeun Lee, Katelyn L. Greer and Juan Merizalde 7 Internet sex crimes 116 Loretta J. Stalans and Amber Horning-Ruf 8 Sale of private, confidential, and personal data 135 Yi Ting Chua 9 Online auction fraud 153 Claire Seungeun Lee, Katelyn L. Greer and Juan Merizalde 10 Internet piracy 162 Jaeyong Choi and Jennifer LaPrade PART II TECHNO-CRIME AT WORK 11 Money laundering 176 Arthur J. Lurigio 12 Embezzlement 190 Emily M. Homer and James Byrne 13 The illicit stolen data market 211 Rachel L. McNealey and Jin R. Lee PART III TECHNO-CRIME AFTER WORK 14 Spreading viruses and malicious codes 229 Kyung-Shick Choi, Claire Seungeun Lee and Juan Merizalde 15 Child pornography, child predators, and sex tourism 248 Joshua S. Long 16 Online hate crimes 275 Ina Kamenova and Arie Perliger 17 Cyberstalking 300 Sabrina S. Rapisarda and Kimberly R. Kras 18 Hacking 331 Marlon Mike Toro-Alvarez PART IV THE GLOBAL RESPONSE TO TECHNO-CRIME: PUBLIC SECTOR AND PRIVATE SECTOR PREVENTION AND CONTROL STRATEGIES 19 Techno-crime prevention: the role of the private sector and its partnerships with the public sector 356 Jaeyong Choi and Brandon Dulisse 20 The jigsaw initiative: theoretical and practical considerations for preventing harm from extreme and extremist content online 372 Neil Shortland and Presley McGarry 21 The prevention and control of online consumer fraud 392 Catarina Cardoso Fonseca, Samuel Moreira and Inês Guedes 22 Managing cyber-risk in offender populations 408 Art Bowker 23 The prosecution, conviction, and sentencing of techno-criminals: the limits of international cooperation 422 Sean M. Perry and Pauline K. Brennan Index
£199.50
Edward Elgar Publishing Handbook of Social Computing
Book Synopsis
£185.25
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Autonomous Vehicles: Tracing the Locus of
Book SynopsisDelving deep into the emerging international and federal statutory and legislative developments surrounding Autonomous Vehicle (AV) technologies, Atilla Kasap assesses whether current motor vehicle regulations, liability law and the liability insurance system are fit for purpose today and in the future.Making a significant and novel contribution to the field, this cutting-edge book comprehensively surveys the promises offered by AVs, including radically reduced road incidents, and economic, environmental and societal benefits, alongside the significant regulatory and liability problems the technology faces. Kasap finds that, as AVs are one of the most significant and profound technological advances of the 21st century, relying on machine learning and pattern recognition systems to function, the current liability regime surrounding them requires a rethinking. Critically analysing the tort liability of AVs, chapters deconstruct and reconstruct a tort law regime for AVs, ultimately solving how policymakers should approach the challenges faced in regulating and enacting AV legislation.Interdisciplinary in approach, it will prove invaluable to students and scholars of computer science and law, particularly those studying AI and robotics law, and those interested in the regulation and governance of AV technology. It also offers vital tools for policymakers seeking concrete principles on which to define potential laws and regulations for AV technology.Trade Review‘Kasap provides an excellent legal analysis of autonomous vehicles based on artificial intelligence (AI). The obvious concern around autonomous vehicles (AVs) is safety. Kasap cites accident statistics to show that AI has the potential to reduce the number of accidents caused by human mistakes and negligence. But before AI-based autopilots become a perfect system, issues will arise. Kasap reviews the legal context today and directions for the near future, discussing the most significant areas of law affecting AVs, considering both international law and US federal statutes (the tort law regime) and including in-depth discussion of liability laws and liability insurance. This analysis is applicable not only to AVs. The technologies that enable autonomy in cars are foundational in many other fields, e.g., robotics, manufacturing systems, aviation/drones, and various military applications. Any cyber-physical system that uses sensors, networks, computing, and a form of movement can be subject to the laws discussed here. Indeed, “malfunction theory” can extend to all kinds of computation with complex algorithms. The text is well referenced and will be invaluable for legal professionals specializing in cases involving AI. Technologists involved in designing and building autonomous systems will also find it useful because Kasap employs language that can reach readers without a legal background.’ -- J. Brzezinski, CHOICE‘For anyone interested in any aspect of autonomous vehicles, from the history of efforts to replace drivers, captains, and pilots, to the technology that will enable that replacement, to the legal reforms required to enable the use of autonomous vehicles, to the disruptive effects they will have on the tort system, this is a comprehensive, readable, and well-constructed source for that information.’ -- Michael D. Green, Washington University in St. Louis, School of Law, US‘An incisive book addressing issues of liability arising from the use of autonomous vehicles as well as the appropriate timing and scope of regulation in this area. Kasap offers an original and insightful analysis of the current legal and regulatory framework in the US that is up to date with the latest relevant technological developments and scholarly contributions.’ -- Apostolos Chronopoulos, Queen Mary University of London, UKTable of ContentsContents: Introduction to regulatory and liability-related questions posed by autonomous vehicles PART I A BRIEF PRIMER ON AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES (AVs) 1. Paving the way: defining the “autonomy” and “automated” of autonomous and automated vehicles 2. The historical development of AVs 3. Autonomous vehicle technology and the state of the art PART II STATUTORY AND REGULATORY REFORMS OF AV TECHNOLOGY:INTERNATIONAL AND U.S. FEDERAL APPROACHES 4. Introduction to Part II 5. International approach 6. Federal law of the United States of America 7. Concluding remarks PART III DECONSTRUCTING AND RECONSTRUCTING A TORT LAW REGIME FOR AVs 8. Introduction to Part III 9. Setting the scene: which entity is “the manufacturer”? 10. Strict product liability 11. Negligence 12. Misrepresentation 13. Proving defect and negligence 14. The case for owners’ liability 15. The possible role of the insurance industry Conclusive remarks on the interaction between law and autonomous vehicles References Index
£83.60
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Critical Studies of Artificial
Book SynopsisAs artificial intelligence (AI) continues to seep into more areas of society and culture, critical social perspectives on its technologies are more urgent than ever before. Bringing together state-of-the-art research from experienced scholars across disciplines, this Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the current state of critical AI studies. Moving beyond narrow technological definitions of AI, the Handbook provides readers with an in-depth understanding of its social, ethical and political implications. Chapters cover a broad range of timely issues related to AI, including the risk of bias and discrimination in its systems, its impact on democracy and governance, concerns surrounding privacy and surveillance, and the use of its technologies in decision-making processes. Underscoring the urgent need for deeper critical analyses of AI, the Handbook constitutes a major contribution to the ongoing discussion about what critical studies of AI can entail, what questions they may pose, and what concepts they can offer to address them. Rich in theoretical and empirical analysis, this cutting-edge Handbook will prove an invaluable resource for students and scholars of digital sociology and science and technology studies. Its extensive coverage of this emerging field will also appeal to practitioners, developers and policymakers seeking orientation in the complex social and political dynamics of AI.Trade Review‘AI is not only technology; it also means power. In times when AI ethics is often closely aligned with big tech and when AI teams are expelled or undervalued, a critical view of AI is much needed. Addressing a diversity of aspects from political economy to sociotechnological imaginaries and activism, this Handbook offers a range of critical scholarship on AI that shows how AI is entangled with the social structures and power relations in society. A welcome antidote to the ideologies of technological optimism, technodeterminism, and technosolutionism, and great support for the critical and interdisciplinary project of developing technology that contributes to, rather than undermines, conviviality and the common good.’ -- Mark Coeckelbergh, University of Vienna, Austria‘AI has proliferated in everyday life. Virtual assistants such as Alexa and Siri are present on our phones and in our homes. More and more people use robotic lawnmowers and robot hoovers. There are bots on the Internet that post, comment, and like. Robots and AI have changed the world of work. ChatGPT has given us an impression of how online search could look like in the future. The world’s largest military forces are investing heavily into the development of AI. We need to better understand what impacts AI has on society. For doing so, we need critical theories and analysis of AI. The Handbook of Critical Studies of Artificial Intelligence provides 75 chapters that help us to better understand what it means to critically study AI in society. This book is excellent reading for everyone interested in AI & society.’ -- Christian Fuchs, Paderborn University, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introducing critical studies of artificial intelligence 1 Simon Lindgren PART I AI AND CRITICAL THEORY: CONCEPTUAL DISCUSSIONS 2 Recursive power: AI governmentality and technofutures 21 Fenwick McKelvey and Jonathan Roberge 3 The danger of smart ideologies: counter-hegemonic intelligence and antagonistic machines 33 Peter Bloom 4 The becoming of AI: a critical perspective on the contingent formation of AI 43 Anna Jobin and Christian Katzenbach 5 Artificial intelligence and the problem of radical uncertainty 56 Robert Holton 6 Trading human autonomy for technological automation 67 Simona Chiodo 7 Automation anxiety: a critical history – the apparently odd recurrence of debates about computation, AI and labour 79 Caroline Bassett and Ben Roberts 8 AI, critical knowledge and subjectivity 94 Eran Fisher 9 Habits and habitus in algorithmic culture 108 Stefka Hristova 10 Algorithms and emerging forms of intimacy 117 Tanja Wiehn 11 It’s incomprehensible: on machine learning and decoloniality 128 Abeba Birhane and Zeerak Talat 12 Pragmatism and AI: a critical approach 141 Johnathan Flowers 13 Digital humanism and AI 152 Wolfgang Hofkirchner and Hans-Jörg Kreowski 14 Beyond AI solutionism: toward a multi-disciplinary approach to artificial intelligence in society 163 Simon Lindgren and Virginia Dignum 15 Artificial intelligence and social memory: towards the cyborgian remembrance of an advancing mnemo-technic 173 Samuel Merrill 16 Making sense of AI-influenced geopolitics using STS theories 187 Arun Teja Polcumpally PART II AI IMAGINARIES AND DISCOURSES 17 Bothering the binaries: unruly AI futures of hauntings and hope at the limit 199 Amanda Lagerkvist and Bo Reimer 18 Imaginaries of artificial intelligence 209 Vanessa Richter, Christian Katzenbach and Mike Schäfer 19 Language of algorithms: agency, metaphors and deliberations in AI discourses 224 Kaisla Kajava and Nitin Sawhney 20 Technological failures, controversies and the myth of AI 237 Andrea Ballatore and Simone Natale 21 Marking the lines of artificial intelligence 245 Mario Verdicchio 22 The critical potential of science fiction 254 Miroslav Kotásek 23 A critical review of news framing of artificial intelligence 266 Ching-Hua Chuan 24 Media representations of artificial intelligence: surveying the field 277 Saba Rebecca Brause, Jing Zeng, Mike S. Schäfer and Christian Katzenbach 25 Educational imaginaries of AI 289 Lina Rahm PART III THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF AI: DATAFICATION AND SURVEILLANCE 26 Critical AI studies meets critical political economy 302 Pieter Verdegem 27 The industry of automating automation: the political economy of the AI industry 312 James Steinhoff 28 AI, class societies and the social life of reason 323 Scott Timcke 29 Re-imagining democracy: AI’s challenge to political theory 333 Guy Paltieli 30 AI as automated inequality: statistics, surveillance and discrimination 343 Mike Zajko 31 Digital tracking and infrastructural power 354 Stine Lomborg, Rasmus Helles and Signe Sophus Lai 32 AI and the everyday political economy of global health 367 Michael Strange and Jason Tucker 33 Addressing global inequity in AI development 378 Chinasa T. Okolo PART IV AI TRANSPARENCY, ETHICS AND REGULATION 34 A critical approach to AI ethics 391 Rosalie A. Waelen 35 Power and inequalities: lifting the veil of ignorance in AI ethics 402 Anais Resseguier 36 Barriers to regulating AI: critical observations from a fractured field 413 Ashlin Lee, Will Orr, Walter G. Johnson, Jenna Imad Harb and Kathryn Henne 37 Why artificial intelligence is not transparent: a critical analysis of its three opacity layers 424 Manuel Carabantes 38 How to critique the GDPR: when data protection is turned against the working class 435 Carl Öhman 39 Four facets of AI transparency 445 Stefan Larsson, Kashyap Haresamudram, Charlotte Högberg, Yucong Lao, Axel Nyström, Kasia Söderlund and Fredrik Heintz 40 An inclusive approach to ascribing responsibility in robot ethics 456 Janina Loh 41 Machines and morals: moral reasoning ability might indicate how close AI is to attaining true equivalence with human intelligence 470 Sukanto Bhattacharya 42 A women’s rights perspective on safe artificial intelligence inside the United Nations 481 Eleonore Fournier-Tombs 43 From ethics to politics: changing approaches to AI education 493 Randy Connolly 44 The transparency of reason: ethical issues of AI art 504 Dejan Grba PART V AI BIAS, NORMATIVITY AND DISCRIMINATION 45 Learning about human behavior? The transcendental status of grammars of action in the processing of HCI data 516 Andreas Beinsteiner 46 Algorithmic moderation: contexts, perceptions, and misconceptions 528 João Gonçalves and Ina Weber 47 Algorithmic exclusion 538 Kendra Albert and Maggie Delano 48 Prospective but disconnected partners: AI-informed criminal risk prediction 549 Kelly Hannah-Moffat and Fernando Avila 49 Power asymmetries, epistemic imbalances and barriers to knowledge: the (im)possibility of knowing algorithms 563 Ana Pop Stefanija 50 Gender, race and the invisible labor of artificial intelligence 573 Laila Brown 51 Machine learning normativity as performativity 584 Tyler Reigeluth 52 Queer eye on AI: binary systems versus fluid identities 595 Karin Danielsson, Andrea Aler Tubella, Evelina Liliequist and Coppélie Cocq 53 Representational silence and racial biases in commercial image recognition services in the context of religion 607 Anton Berg and Katja Valaskivi 54 Social media as classification systems: procedural normative choices in user profiling 619 Severin Engelmann and Orestis Papakyriakopoulos 55 From hate speech recognition to happiness indexing: critical issues in datafication of emotion in text mining 631 Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, Juho Pääkkönen and Emily Öhman PART VI POLITICS AND ACTIVISM IN AI 56 Democratic friction in speech governance by AI 643 Niva Elkin-Koren and Maayan Perel 57 Automating empathy: overview, technologies, criticism 656 Andrew McStay and Vian Bakir 58 Ideational tensions in the Swedish automation debate: initial findings 670 Kalle Eriksson 59 En-countering AI as algorhythmic practice 682 Shintaro Miyazaki 60 Introducing political ecology of Creative-Ai 691 Andre Holzapfel PART VII AI AND AUTOMATION IN SOCIETY 61 Automated decision-making in the public sector 705 Vanja Carlsson, Malin Rönnblom and Andreas Öjehag-Pettersson 62 The landscape of social bot research: a critical appraisal 716 Harry Yaojun Yan and Kai-Cheng Yang 63 Introducing robots and AI in human service organizations: what are the implications for employees and service users? 726 Susanne Tafvelin, Jan Hjelte, Robyn Schimmer, Maria Forsgren, Vicenc Torra and Andreas Stenling 64 Critically analyzing autonomous materialities 737 Mikael Wiberg 65 Exploring critical dichotomies of AI and the Rule of Law 749 Markus Naarttijärvi 66 The use of AI in domestic security practices 763 Jens Hälterlein 67 Methodological reflections on researching the sociotechnical imaginaries of AI in policing 773 Carrie B. Sanders and Janet Chan 68 Emergence of artificial intelligence in health care: a critical review 783 Annika M. Svensson and Fabrice Jotterand 69 The politics of imaginary technologies: innovation ecosystems as political choreographies for promoting care robotics in health care 793 Jaana Parviainen 70 AI in education: landscape, vision and critical ethical challenges in the 21st century 804 Daniel S. Schiff and Rinat Rosenberg-Kima 71 Critically assessing AI/ML for cultural heritage: potentials and challenges 815 Anna Foka, Lina Eklund, Anders Sundnes Løvlie and Gabriele Griffin 72 AI ethnography 826 Anne Dippel and Andreas Sudmann 73 Automating social theory 845 Ralph Schroeder 74 Artificial intelligence and scientific problem choice at the nexus of industry and academia 859 Steve G. Hoffman 75 Myths, techno solutionism and artificial intelligence: reclaiming AI materiality and its massive environmental costs 869 Benedetta Brevini 76 AI governance and civil society: the need for critical engagement 878 Megan LePere-Schloop and Sandy Zook Index 891
£294.50
Ethics International Press Ltd Ethical Reasoning for a Data-Centered World
Book SynopsisThe American Statistical Association (ASA) and the Association of Computing Machinery (ACM) have longstanding ethical practice standards that are explicitly intended to be utilized by all who use statistical practices or computing, or both. Since statistics and computing are critical in any data-centered activity, these practice standards are essential to instruction in the uses of statistical practices or computing across disciplines. Ethical Reasoning For A Data-Centered World is aimed at any undergraduate or graduate students utilizing data. Whether the career goal is research, teaching, business, government, or a combination, this book presents a method for understanding and prioritizing ethical statistics, computing, and data science featuring the ASA and ACM practice standards. To facilitate engagement, integration with prior learning, and authenticity, the material is organized around seven tasks: Planning/Designing; Data collection; Analysis; Interpretation; Reporting; Documenting; and Engaging in team work. This book is a companion volume to Ethical Practice of Statistics and Data Science, also published by Ethics International Press (2022). These are the first and only books to be based on, and to provide guidance to, the American Statistical Association (ASA) and Association of Computing Machinery (ACM) ethical guideline documents.
£71.99
Emerald Publishing Limited From Microverse to Metaverse: Modelling the
Book SynopsisWhile the metaverse is often marketed as a future utopia, the vision of the metaverse represents an attempt for private corporations to control the code of the real. In the hands of companies that established and maintain the surveillance capitalism model, the ability to build a persistent, all-compassing environment means all activity in that world can be metricized and commodified, making the metaverse worthy of critical examination. Significant parts of life are already conducted in a digital place that combines various aspects of digital culture. Likewise, digital worlds for socializing already exist, and in a form akin to the VR metaverse, just as VR worlds based on play now coexist with online worlds of user generated content. These discreet private “microverses”, as we refer to them, are spaces which can model the tensions that would be inherent in the metaverse. From Microverse to Metaverse: Modelling the Future through Today's Virtual Worlds examines the place attachments, world-feeling and dwelling of several “microverses” to assess the possibilities of the metaverse as a realistic proposition. Critically analyzing the phenomenological feeling of place, the political economy of emerging tech, the mechanisms of identity and self along with the behavioral constraints involved, the authors map what a metaverse might be like, whether it can happen, and just why some companies seem so determined to make it happen.Table of ContentsChapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The Roots of the Metaverse Chapter 3. Social worlds Chapter 4. Gaming worlds Chapter 5. User generated worlds Chapter 6. Worlds of Commerce Chapter 7. Worlds of Desire Chapter 8. Entertainment Worlds Chapter 9. Fitness Worlds Chapter 10. Conclusion – Building the world we want to build
£45.59