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Perspectives on Digital Humanism
other
Editor(s):
Hannes Werthner
,
Erich Prem
,
Edward A. Lee
,
Carlo Ghezzi
Publication date
(Print):
2022
Publisher:
Springer International Publishing
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There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
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Policy Perspectives
Author and book information
Book
ISBN (Print):
978-3-030-86143-8
ISBN (Electronic):
978-3-030-86144-5
Publication date (Print):
2022
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-030-86144-5
SO-VID:
f0327a4e-35b4-4a8b-a0c4-e79fd2c432ee
History
Funding
Verein zur Förderung des digitalen Humanismus;
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Book chapters
pp. 3
Are We Losing Control?
pp. 9
Social Robots: Their History and What They Can Do for Us
pp. 19
Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control
pp. 25
The Challenge of Human Dignity in the Era of Autonomous Systems
pp. 33
The Real Cost of Surveillance Capitalism: Digital Humanism in the United States and Europe
pp. 41
Democratic Discourse in the Digital Public Sphere: Re-imagining Copyright Enforcement on Online Social Media Platforms
pp. 47
The Internet Is Dead: Long Live the Internet
pp. 53
Return to Freedom: Governance of Fair Innovation Ecosystems
pp. 61
Decolonizing Technology and Society: A Perspective from the Global South
pp. 71
Digital Humanism and the Limits of Artificial Intelligence
pp. 77
Explorative Experiments and Digital Humanism: Adding an Epistemic Dimension to the Ethical Debate
pp. 83
Digital Humanism and Global Issues in Artificial Intelligence Ethics
pp. 89
Our Digital Mirror
pp. 97
Fictionalizing the Robot and Artificial Intelligence
pp. 101
How to Be a Digital Humanist in International Relations: Cultural Tech Diplomacy Challenges Silicon Valley
pp. 109
We Are Needed More Than Ever: Cultural Heritage, Libraries, and Archives
pp. 115
Humanism and the Great Opportunity of Intelligent User Interfaces for Cultural Heritage
pp. 123
The Attention Economy and the Impact of Artificial Intelligence
pp. 135
Did You Find It on the Internet? Ethical Complexities of Search Engine Rankings
pp. 145
Personalization, Fairness, and Post-Userism
pp. 153
The Curation Chokepoint
pp. 159
Business Model Innovation and the Rise of Technology Giants
pp. 165
Scaling Up Broken Systems? Considerations from the Area of Music Streaming
pp. 173
The Platform Economy After COVID-19: Regulation and the Precautionary Principle
pp. 183
Educational Requirements for Positive Social Robotics
pp. 191
Informatics as a Fundamental Discipline in General Education: The Danish Perspective
pp. 201
The Unbearable Disembodiedness of Cognitive Machines
pp. 213
The Technological Construction of Sovereignty
pp. 219
A Crucial Decade for European Digital Sovereignty
pp. 227
Geopolitics and Digital Sovereignty
pp. 233
Cultural Influences on Artificial Intelligence: Along the New Silk Road
pp. 241
Geopolitics, Digital Sovereignty…What’s in a Word?
pp. 251
Work Without Jobs
pp. 257
Why Don’t You Do Something to Help Me? Digital Humanism: A Call for Cities to Act
pp. 263
Ethics or Quality of Life?
pp. 271
Responsible Technology Design: Conversations for Success
pp. 277
Navigating Through Changes of a Digital World
pp. 285
Efficiency vs. Resilience: Lessons from COVID-19
pp. 291
Contact Tracing Apps: A Lesson in Societal Aspects of Technological Development
pp. 297
Data, Models, and Decisions: How We Can Shape Our World by Not Predicting the Future
pp. 303
Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic
pp. 309
The Need for Respectful Technologies: Going Beyond Privacy
pp. 317
Digital Humanism: Navigating the Tensions Ahead
pp. 323
Should We Rethink How We Do Research?
pp. 329
Interdisciplinarity: Models and Values for Digital Humanism
pp. 335
It Is Simple, It Is Complicated
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