Journal: SIGCAS Computers and Society

Volume 45, Issue 4

4 -- 6Michael James Heron, Pauline Belford. Fuzzy ethics: or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bot
7 -- 14Douglas Schuler. How we may think: the next chapter: civic intelligence and collective metacognition
15 -- 16Walt Surratt. The shallows: how the internet is changing our brains a response #1
17 -- 18Jerry Holsopple. The shallows: how the internet is changing our brains a response #2
19 -- 20Dee A. B. Weikle. The shallows: how the internet is changing our brains a response #3

Volume 45, Issue 3

6 -- 10Hiroshi Koga. Generation process of gaze by the surveillance camera: case of Kamagasaki of Japan
11 -- 17Yeslam Al-Saggaf, Oliver K. Burmeister, John Weckert. Perceptions of incompetence in the ICT workplace
18 -- 24Diane Whitehouse, Penny Duquenoy, Kai K. Kimppa, Oliver K. Burmeister, Don Gotterbarn, David Kreps, Norberto Patrignani. Twenty-five years of ICT and society: codes of ethics and cloud computing
25 -- 32Andrea Resca, Bendik Bygstad. Amazon and the self
33 -- 37Sachiko Yanagihara, Hiroshi Koga. The significance of ICT in the generation of code of conduct: from the perspective of polarization of ICT and organizational citizenship behavior
38 -- 44Nurul Amin Badrul, Shirley Ann Williams, Karsten Øster Lundqvist. Online disclosure of employment information: exploring Malaysian government employees' views in different contexts
45 -- 51Alexis Elder. Boundary enforcement and social disruption through computer-mediated communication
52 -- 59Brandt Dainow. Key dialectics in cloud services
60 -- 67Don Gotterbarn. The creation of facts in the cloud: a fiction in the making
68 -- 72Norberto Patrignani, Iordanis Kavathatzopoulos. Cloud computing: the ultimate step towards the virtual enterprise?
73 -- 78Anne-Marie Tuikka, Minna Rantanen, Olli I. Heimo, Jani S. S. Koskinen, Neeraj Sachdeva, Kai K. Kimppa. Where is patient in EHR project?
79 -- 83Joseph Lindley, Dhruv Sharma. Operationalising design fiction for ethical computing
84 -- 90Elvira Perez Vallejos, Ansgar Koene, Christopher James Carter, Ramona Statache, Tom Rodden, Derek McAuley, Monica Cano, Svenja Adolphs, Claire O'Malley, Kruakae Pothong, Stephen Coleman. Juries: acting out digital dilemmas to promote digital reflections
91 -- 99Jasmin Hammon. Alterity and freedom of information on the internet: the loss of net neutrality in contemporary literature
100 -- 108B. Tyr Fothergill, Catherine Flick. The ethics of human-chicken relationships in video games: the origins of the digital chicken
109 -- 117Brandt Dainow. Digital alienation as the foundation of online privacy concerns
118 -- 125Andra Gumbus, Frances S. Grodzinsky. Era of big data: danger of descrimination
126 -- 131Marty J. Wolf, Frances S. Grodzinsky, Keith W. Miller. Augmented reality all around us: power and perception at a crossroads
132 -- 137Kai K. Kimppa, Olli I. Heimo, J. Tuomas Harviainen. First dose is always freemium
138 -- 146Olli I. Heimo, Minna Rantanen, Kai K. Kimppa. Wilma ruined my life: how an educational system became the criminal record for the adolescents
147 -- 153Sandra Burri Gram-Hansen, Thomas Ryberg. From participatory design and ontological ethics, towards an approach to constructive ethics
154 -- 158Ryoko Asai. Between insanity and love
159 -- 166Sheila Zimic, Rolf Dalin. Systematical follow-up in social work practices
167 -- 171Ansgar Koene, Elvira Perez, Christopher James Carter, Ramona Statache, Svenja Adolphs, Claire O'Malley, Tom Rodden, Derek McAuley. Privacy concerns arising from internet service personalization filters
172 -- 178Mark Coeckelbergh, Wessel Reijers. Cryptocurrencies as narrative technologies
179 -- 184Neil McBride. The ethics of driverless cars
185 -- 192Isabel Borges Alvarez, Nuno S. Alves Silva, Luisa Sampaio Correia. Cyber education: towards a pedagogical and heuristic learning
193 -- 201Helena Webb, Marina Jirotka, Bernd Carsten Stahl, William Housley, Adam Edwards, Matthew L. Williams, Rob Procter, Omer F. Rana, Pete Burnap. Digital wildfires: hyper-connectivity, havoc and a global ethos to govern social media
202 -- 210Christopher James Carter, Ansgar Koene, Elvira Perez, Ramona Statache, Svenja Adolphs, Claire O'Malley, Tom Rodden, Derek McAuley. Understanding academic attitudes towards the ethical challenges posed by social media research
211 -- 217Richard Volkman. The path dependence of dynamic traditions and the illusion of cultural AIDS
218 -- 224Teresa Scantamburlo. Machine learning in decisional process: a philosophical perspective
225 -- 233Stephen Rainey. Friends, robots, citizens?
234 -- 239Dov Greenbaum. Ethical, legal and social concerns relating to exoskeletons
240 -- 247Makoto Nakada. Ba (locus) as the place of new sources for technological and social innovation as well as for ethical discussions on robots and life in the information era
248 -- 254Alexis Elder. False friends and false coinage: a tool for navigating the ethics of sociable robots
255 -- 260Paul B. de Laat. Trusting the (ro)botic other: by assumption?
261 -- 269Wilhelm E. J. Klein. Robots make ethics honest: and vice versa
270 -- 273Ingrid Björk, Iordanis Kavathatzopoulos. Robots, ethics and language
274 -- 279Anne Gerdes. The issue of moral consideration in robot ethics
280 -- 286Heike Felzmann, Timur Beyan, Mark Ryan, Oya Deniz Beyan. Implementing an ethical approach to big data analytics in assistive robotics for elderly with dementia
287 -- 289Mark Coeckelbergh. The invisible robots of global finance: making visible machines, people, and places
290 -- 293Kathleen Richardson. The asymmetrical 'relationship': parallels between prostitution and the development of sex robots
294 -- 300Emad Yaghmaei. Addressing responsible research and innovation to industry: introduction of a conceptual framework
301 -- 305Catherine Flick. Ask an ethicist: reflections on an engagement technique for industry
306 -- 312Emad Yaghmaei, Alexander Brem. Case study research to reflect societal and ethical issues: introduction of a research implementation plan for ICTs
313 -- 317Tilimbe Jiya. A realisation of ethical concerns with smartphone personal health monitoring apps
318 -- 325Peter Vistisen, Thessa Jensen, Søren Bolvig Poulsen. Animating the ethical demand: exploring user dispositions in industry innovation cases through animation-based sketching
326 -- 331Kimmo Tarkkanen, Jani S. S. Koskinen, Ville Harkke. Distorted usability design in IT tendering
332 -- 336David Kreps, Jessica Blaynee, Maria Kutar, Marie Griffiths. KTP and RRI: the perfect match
337 -- 343Thomas Dyrmann Winkel, Thessa Jensen, Søren Bolvig Poulsen. Who is to change?: nudging and provocative communication discussed through Løgstrup's ontological ethics
345 -- 347Ryoko Asai, Iordanis Kavathatzopoulos. Ethical competence and social responsibility in scientific research using ICT tools
348 -- 355Sara Helen Wilford. What is required of requirements?: a first stage process towards developing guidelines for responsible research and innovation
356 -- 360Christian B. J. Hansen. When brain computer interfaces move from research to commercial use
361 -- 368Kiyoshi Murata, Yasunori Fukuta, Yohko Orito, Andrew A. Adams, Ana María Lara Palma. So what if the state is monitoring us?: Snowden's revelations have little social impact in Japan
369 -- 375Gehan Gunasekara, Kiyoshi Murata, Andrew A. Adams, Ana María Lara Palma. Young people do care: Snowden's revelations have had an effect in New Zealand
376 -- 383Andrew A. Adams, Kiyoshi Murata, Yasunori Fukuta, Yohko Orito, Ana María Lara Palma. The view from the gallery: international comparison of attitudes to Snowden's revelations about the NSA/GCHQ
384 -- 392Kiyoshi Murata, Yasunori Fukuta, Andrew A. Adams, Xiongfang Duan, Ronghua Dang, Ana María Lara Palma. Snowden seems to have more social impact in the people's republic of China than in the republic of China, but
393 -- 397Michael Schleusener, Sarah Stevens, Sebastian Brenner, Kiyoshi Murata, Andrew A. Adams, Ana María Lara Palma. Snowden's revelations led to more informed and shocked German citizens
398 -- 406Mario Arias Oliva, Ana María Lara Palma, Kiyoshi Murata, Andrew A. Adams. Information surveillance by governments: impacts of Snowden's revelations in Spain
407 -- 415Juan Carlos Yáñez Luna, Mario Arias Oliva, Kiyoshi Murata, Pedro I. González Ramírez, Andrew A. Adams, Ana María Lara Palma. Surveillance of information and personal data by Mexican government: the social impact in Mexican citizens
416 -- 419Iordanis Kavathatzopoulos, Ryoko Asai. Judging the complexity of privacy, openness and loyalty issues
420 -- 426Martyn Edwards, Dave Darwent, Charly Irons. That blasted facebook page: supporting trainee-teachers professional learning through social media
427 -- 431Richard Taylor, Michael Fitzpatrick. Carey grammar school: a case study of the degree to which a digitally rich school can be considered to have the attributes of a digital society
432 -- 437Shalini Kesar. Including teaching ethics into pedagogy: preparing information systems students to meet global challenges of real business settings
438 -- 444Michael James Heron, Pauline Belford. Musings on misconduct: a practitioner reflection on the ethical investigation of plagiarism within programming modules
445 -- 452Simon Jones. Teaching smart phone ethics: an interdisciplinary approach

Volume 45, Issue 2

4 -- 0Simon Rogerson. Technological dependency
5 -- 6Vaibhav Garg. Learning how to learn with Prof. Barbara Oakley
7 -- 10Pooja Sankar, Jessica Gilmartin, Melissa Sobel. An examination of belongingness and confidence among female computer science students
11 -- 19Michael James Heron, Pauline Belford. Power and perception in the scandal in academia
20 -- 28Vaibhav Garg, L. Jean Camp. Why cybercrime?
29 -- 30Michael Goldweber. Computer science education for social good
31 -- 32Jill Denner, Jacob Martinez, Louise Ann Lyon. Computing for the social good: engaging Latino/a students in K-12
33 -- 0Dee A. B. Weikle. CSG-Ed: a beginning trio for a CS0 course
34 -- 0James K. Huggins. Computing history & ethics: the relevance of the real world for social change
35 -- 0Lori Postner, Darci Burdge, Stoney Jackson, Heidi J. C. Ellis, George Hislop, Sean P. Goggins. Using humanitarian free and open source software (HFOSS) to introduce computing for the social good
36 -- 37Stoney Jackson, Heidi J. C. Ellis. Supporting HFOSS using scrum in a capstone course
38 -- 0Cam Macdonell. Ushahidi: a crisis mapping system
39 -- 40Joseph Mertz. Computing for the social good and cultivating cultures for ethical computing
41 -- 0James W. McGuffee. Non-profit geographically constrained locator
42 -- 0Sheikh Ghafoor, Ryan Marshall, Faisal Hossain. LiquidEarth - river: a satellite based operational river height forecasting system for Bangladesh
43 -- 0Robert E. Beck. Computing for the social good: experiences outside the walls

Volume 45, Issue 1

4 -- 10Erin Kenneally. How to throw the race to the bottom: revisiting signals for ethical and legal research using online data
11 -- 13Andreas O. Bender. Visual cryptography on postage stamps
14 -- 15Aylin Caliskan Islam. How do we decide how much to reveal?
16 -- 21Paul Gerber, Melanie Volkamer, Karen Renaud. Usability versus privacy instead of usable privacy: Google's balancing act between usability and privacy
22 -- 28Serge Egelman, Eyal Péer. Predicting privacy and security attitudes
29 -- 37Iacovos Kirlappos, Simon E. Parkin, M. Angela Sasse. "Shadow security" as a tool for the learning organization
38 -- 41Anand Shah, Shishir Dahake, Sri Hari Haran J.. Valuing data security and privacy using cyber insurance
42 -- 0Ed Nichols. 'Twas a week before x-mas