Journal: J. Inf., Comm, Ethics in Society

Volume 19, Issue 4

425 -- 432Simon Rogerson. For the record: the evolution of acceptable digital technology
433 -- 445Ahmad Ghandour, Viktor Shestak, Konstantin Sokolovskiy. Security and privacy of adolescents in social applications and networks: legislative aspects and legal practice of countering cyberbullying on example of developed and developing countries
446 -- 462Ratna Yudhiyati, Afrida Putritama, Diana Rahmawati. What small businesses in developing country think of cybersecurity risks in the digital age: Indonesian case
463 -- 479Antti Talonen, Jukka Mähönen, Lasse Koskinen, Päivikki Kuoppakangas. Analysis of consumers' negative perceptions of health tracking in insurance - a value sacrifice approach
480 -- 491Soraj Hongladarom. The Thailand national AI ethics guideline: an analysis
492 -- 505Jillian Carmody, Samir Shringarpure, Gerhard Van de Venter. AI and privacy concerns: a smart meter case study
506 -- 520Sebastian Weydner-Volkmann, Linus Feiten. Trust in technology: interlocking trust concepts for privacy respecting video surveillance
521 -- 536Simisola Akintoye, George Ogoh, Zoi Krokida, Juliana Nnadi, Damian Eke. Understanding the perceptions of UK COVID-19 contact tracing app in the BAME community in Leicester
537 -- 559Rhoydah Nyambane. The future of the printed book in the era of technological advancement: an imperative for digital innovation and engagement
560 -- 579Rocci Luppicini, Eman Walabe. Exploring the socio-cultural aspects of e-learning delivery in Saudi Arabia

Volume 19, Issue 3

313 -- 328Charles M. Ess. Guest editorial
329 -- 344Nesibe Kantar, Terrell Ward Bynum. Global ethics for the digital age - flourishing ethics
345 -- 357Bastiaan Vanacker. Virtue ethics, situationism and casuistry: toward a digital ethics beyond exemplars
358 -- 373Morten Bay. Four challenges to Confucian virtue ethics in technology
374 -- 390Chi Kwok, Ngai Keung Chan. Towards a political theory of data justice: a public good perspective
391 -- 408Katja Kaufmann, Tabea Bork-Hüffer, Niklas Gudowsky, Marjo Rauhala, Martin Rutzinger. Ethical challenges of researching emergent socio-material-technological phenomena: insights from an interdisciplinary mixed-methods project using mobile eye-tracking
409 -- 423Ylva Hård Af Segerstad. On the complexities of studying sensitive communities online as a researcher-participant

Volume 19, Issue 2

181 -- 186Mike Healy. Editorial
187 -- 206Sophia Kaitatzi-Whitlock. Toward a digital civil society: digital ethics through communication education
207 -- 221Karma Samir Sherif, Omolola Jewisimi, Mazen El-Masri. Empowering employees: the other side of electronic performance monitoring
222 -- 235Md. Nurul Momen, Harsha S., Debobrata Das. Mediated democracy and internet shutdown in India
236 -- 248Chukwuma Ukoha, Andrew Stranieri. The delicate balance of communicational interests: A Bakhtinian view of social media in health care
249 -- 267Eduardo Alejandro López Jiménez, Tania Ouariachi. An exploration of the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) and automation for communication professionals
268 -- 279Aaditeshwar Seth. A call to technologists to ensure that responsible outcomes arise from their innovations
280 -- 298Miral Sabry AlAshry. New constitution and media freedom in Libya: journalists' perspectives
299 -- 312Olya Kudina, Mark Coeckelbergh. "Alexa, define empowerment": voice assistants at home, appropriation and technoperformances

Volume 19, Issue 1

1 -- 19Kevin Watson, Dinah M. Payne. Ethical practice in sharing and mining medical data
20 -- 37Luis M. Romero-Rodriguez, Sabina Civila, Ignacio Aguaded 0001. Otherness as a form of intersubjective social exclusion: Conceptual discussion from the current communicative scenario
38 -- 60Rakesh Belwal, Rahima Al Shibli, Shweta Belwal. Consumer protection and electronic commerce in the Sultanate of Oman
61 -- 86Mark Ryan 0004, Bernd Carsten Stahl. Artificial intelligence ethics guidelines for developers and users: clarifying their content and normative implications
87 -- 103Mohammad Moradi, Qi Li 0012. Rogue people: on adversarial crowdsourcing in the context of cyber security
104 -- 128Xiao Zhang, Yun Wu, Wendy Wang. eWOM, what are we suspecting? Motivation, truthfulness or identity
129 -- 145Amit Lavie Dinur, Matan Aharoni, Yuval Karniel. Safe online ethical code for and by the "net generation": themes emerging from school students' wisdom of the crowd
146 -- 162Azi Lev-On, Nili Steinfeld, Hama Abu-Kishk, Sigal Pearl Naim. The long-term effects of digital literacy programs for disadvantaged populations: analyzing participants' perceptions
163 -- 179Otobong Inieke, Babatunde Mustapha Raimi-Lawal. Adopting social media as an information system - a case study of an internet service company in Abuja, Nigeria