Search results for "privacy"

showing 10 items of 402 documents

Diritto alla privacy e accesso agli atti del fascicolo telematico processuale da parte di terzi-giornalisti: “quo vadis” Italia?

2023

In this work, we want to try to examine what might be – today – the consequences of a contrast between the national legislation, artt. 51 and 52 of 30 June 2003, n. 196 (so-called Privacy Code) and art. 17 of the d.P.C.M. of 16 February 2016, n. 40, and the European legislation, art. 55 of the Privacy Regulation of 25 May 2016, n. 679, regarding the relationship between the protection of personal data, the right of access to the deeds of the electronic file of the administrative process by third parties (here of interest to journalists) and the right to information.

Privacy regulationSettore IUS/10 - Diritto Amministrativoprotection of personal data
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The challenge of personal data protection in the era of digital economy

2018

The actual impact and effectiveness of the GDPR that comes into effect on May 25, 2018 will only be evident in the course of next years. Today, however it is crucial to understand how will the GDPR change the EU data protection playfield and if the new regulation is capable to address growing personal data and privacy challenges emerging from further digitalisation in the long term. The research question of this paper is: How capable and effective is the newly adopted EU data protection legislation to address the growing future privacy and data protection concerns associated with expansion of the Digital Economy?

Privacy:LAW/JURISPRUDENCE::Other law::European law [Research Subject Categories]General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
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Privacy, Sicurezza e Libertà nell’era della sorveglianza di massa e dell’emergenza terrorismo

PrivacySorveglianza elettronicaSettore IUS/08 - Diritto CostituzionaleSicurezzaDatagateData RetentionTerrorismoBilanciamento
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Facebook’s Emotional Contagion Experiment as a Challenge to Research Ethics

2016

This article analyzes the ethical discussion focusing on the Facebook emotional contagion experiment published by the <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</em> in 2014. The massive-scale experiment manipulated the News Feeds of a large amount of Facebook users and was successful in proving that emotional contagion happens also in online environments. However, the experiment caused ethical concerns within and outside academia mainly for two intertwined reasons, the first revolving around the idea of research as manipulation, and the second focusing on the problematic definition of informed consent. The article concurs with recent research that the era of social med…

PrivatsphäreFacebookresearch ethicsuser dataEmotional contagionddc:070Sociology & anthropologylcsh:Communication. Mass mediaForschungsarten der Sozialforschung0508 media and communicationsbig dataSoziale MedienInformed consentyksityisyysUtilitarianismData Protection Act 1998Sociologyta518emotionalitySozialwissenschaften Soziologiescience ethicsCommunication05 social sciencesinformed consentmethodologyMethodologie06 humanities and the artsPublic relationsWissenschaftsethiklcsh:P87-96Deontological ethicsResearch Designtutkimusetiikkaddc:300manipulaatio (psykologia)ddc:301Sociology of Science Sociology of Technology Research on Science and TechnologyWissenschaftssoziologie Wissenschaftsforschung Technikforschung TechniksoziologieSocial psychologyBig data; emotional contagion; informed consent; manipulation; research ethics; user dataCyberpsychologysocial mediasosiaalinen media050801 communication & media studiesemotional contagion0603 philosophy ethics and religionprivacyBig dataInteractive electronic Mediatietoon perustuva suostumusEmotionalitätSocial mediaDatengewinnungSocial sciences sociology anthropologyinteraktive elektronische MedienNews media journalism publishingdata protectionResearch ethicsForschungresearchComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONbusiness.industrymetodologiaDatenschutzdata captureSoziologie AnthropologiemanipulationPublizistische Medien JournalismusVerlagswesen060301 applied ethicsbusinessMedia and Communication
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Localizing the politics of privacy in communication and media research

2020

While previous communication and media research has largely focused on either studying privacy as personal boundary management or made efforts to investigate the structural (legal or economic) condition of privacy, we observe an emergent body of research on the political underpinnings of privacy linking both aspects. A pronounced understanding of the politics of privacy is however lacking. In this contribution, we set out to push this forward by mapping four communication and media perspectives on the political implications of privacy. In order to do so, we recur on Barry’s (2002) distinction of the political and the politics and outline linkages between individual and structural dimensions…

Privatsphäredata protectionKommunikationsforschungcommunication research300 Sozialwissenschaften300 Social sciencesTechnologieComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTINGDatenschutzprivacyddc:070lcsh:P87-96lcsh:Communication. Mass mediaBasic Research General Concepts and History of the Science of CommunicationtechnologyPublizistische Medien JournalismusVerlagswesenAllgemeines spezielle Theorien und Schulen Methoden Entwicklung und Geschichte der Kommunikationswissenschaftenmedia researchpoliticsNews media journalism publishing
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The Politics of Privacy - a Useful Tautology

2020

While communication and media studies tend to define privacy with reference to data security, current processes of datafication and commodification substantially transform ways of how people act in increasingly dense communicative networks. This begs for advancing research on the flow of individual and organizational information considering its relational, contextual and, in consequence, political dimensions. Privacy, understood as the control over the flow of individual or group information in relation to communicative actions of others, frames the articles assembled in this thematic issue. These contributions focus on theoretical challenges of contemporary communication and media privacy …

Privatsphärepolitical factorspolitische FaktorenKommunikationsforschungagency; datafication; media practicesMedienkulturInternet privacymedia practicesData security050801 communication & media studiesMedia Politics Information Politics Media LawprivacyMedienpolitik Informationspolitik Medienrechtddc:070lcsh:Communication. Mass mediaPolitics0508 media and communications050602 political science & public administrationSociologydata securitydataficationNews media journalism publishingcommunication researchCommodificationDataficationbusiness.industryCommunication05 social sciencesTautology (grammar)data exchangelcsh:P87-960506 political scienceDatenaustauschagencymedia culturePublizistische Medien JournalismusVerlagswesenpoliticsbusinessDatensicherheit
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2019

Abstract Peer review is not only a quality screening mechanism for scholarly journals. It also connects authors and referees either directly or indirectly. This means that their positions in the network structure of the community could influence the process, while peer review could in turn influence subsequent networking and collaboration. This paper aims to map these complex network implications by looking at 2232 author/referee couples in an interdisciplinary journal that uses double blind peer review. By reconstructing temporal co-authorship networks, we found that referees tended to recommend more positively submissions by authors who were within three steps in their collaboration netwo…

Process (engineering)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInternet privacyNetwork structureLibrary and Information SciencesComplex networkComputer Science ApplicationsDouble blindInvisible handQuality (business)Psychologybusinessmedia_commonJournal of Informetrics
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Contact with Nature as Essential to the Human Experience

2021

Human contact with nature is more important than ever before considering the global confinement brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, the increased urbanization of society, and increased rates of mental disorders and threats to human well-being. This article conveys the importance of contact with nature from three perspectives: historical, sociocultural, and scientific. These perspectives convey the many ways in which contact with nature is essential to human life, the multiple ways in which this is expressed, and the broad range of benefits this has. The case for preserving the natural environment continues to be made in light of the dangers of climate change, the deleterious effects of …

Property (philosophy)Downloadbusiness.industryWarrantyInternet privacyGeneral Social Sciences010501 environmental sciencesPermission01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSalientUrbanizationNatural (music)030212 general & internal medicineSociologySociocultural evolutionbusiness0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNature and Culture
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Comments on “Failure, Identity Loss and Living Information Systems” by P. Kanellis, M. Lycett, and R.J. Paul

2000

Information system (IS) failure is a pervasive phenomenon. Like the paper’s introduction, common sense and statistics show information system failure is common and also important, because huge amounts of human effort and economic resources are spent without much gain. The issue of failure is also related to FRISCO report and the theme of the conference in two ways. First our concepts and ideas about information system and the nature of information system development can affect either positively or negatively our intellectual and technical capabilities to influence the likelihood of IS failure. Second, because information system definition forms one key concept and focus of the FRISCO report…

Psychoanalysisbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInternet privacyIdentity (social science)Common senseAffect (psychology)Focus (linguistics)PhenomenonKey (cryptography)Information systemSociologybusinessTheme (narrative)media_common
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Privacy invasions

2006

Nowhere has technological progress been as dramatic as in the field of information and communication technology (ICT). Citizens of the developed world now live in an environment in which access to electronic information and communication is nearly ubiquitous—and we rely heavily on being surrounded by this technology. In fact, it is so omnipresent that we only recognize our dependence on ICT when a network server or a communications system fails, leaving us cut off from cyberspace. > …computers, mobile telephones, personal digital assistants, music players and all other types of electronic gadgets are further shrinking in size, and we will soon wear them as we do clothes or jewellery… The fi…

Public SectorPatriot ActScience and Societybusiness.industryInternet privacyPublic sectorHomelandBiochemistryIdentification (information)Credit cardPrivacyInformation and Communications TechnologyGeneticsHumansPrivate SectorConfidentialityCyberspacebusinessMolecular BiologyComputer SecurityConfidentialityEMBO reports
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