Cybersecurity, Ethics, and Collective Responsibility
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 29 August 2024
- ISBN 9780190058135
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages384 pages
- Size 236x166x32 mm
- Weight 676 g
- Language English 550
Categories
Short description:
The advent of the Internet, exponential growth in computing power, and rapid developments in artificial intelligence have raised numerous cybersecurity-related ethical questions across various domains. From a liberal democratic perspective, this work analyses key ethical concepts in the field and develops ethical guidelines to regulate cyberspace.
MoreLong description:
This is an open access title. It is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International licence. It is available to read and download as a PDF version on the Oxford Academic platform.
The advent of the Internet, exponential growth in computing power, and rapid developments in artificial intelligence have raised numerous cybersecurity-related ethical questions in various domains. The dual use character of cybertechnology-that it can be used to provide great benefits to humankind but can also do great harm-means that business (data security, data ownership and privacy), public communication (disinformation and computational propaganda), health (privacy, ransomware attacks), law enforcement (data security, predictive policing) and interstate conflict (cyberwar, autonomous weapons) are of vital interest to cybersecurity ethics.
This work analyses the key ethical concepts in the field, such as privacy, freedom of communication, security, and the right to self-defence, and develops sets of ethical guidelines for the regulation of cyberspace in these various domains. From a liberal democratic perspective, Seumas Miller and Terry Bossomaier seek to protect individual rights while ensuring the collective good of cybersecurity. They also pay close attention to institutionally embedded collective moral responsibilities that function as 'webs of prevention' against cyberattacks. These webs, they argue, need new regulation and the redesign of institutional roles, as well as technical countermeasures to cyberattacks, such as passwords, encryption, firewalls, and 'patching.' At times, webs of prevention also involve offensive and defensive measures. In their expert analysis and guidance, Miller and Bossomaier reinforce just how much is at stake in the field of cybersecurity ethics.
Table of Contents:
Glossary
Introduction
Chapter 1 - Cybersecurity: Threats, Countermeasures and the Institutional Landscape
Chapter 2 - Privacy and Confidentiality: Bulk Data, Surveillance, and Encryption
Chapter 3 - Freedom of Political Communication and Computational Propaganda: Rights, Responsibilities and Truth-aiming by Reasoning with Others
Chapter 4 - Criminal Justice, Artificial Intelligence and Liberal Democracy
Chapter 5 - Public Health, Pandemics and Cybertechnology: Individual Rights and Collective Goods
Chapter 6 - Cyber Conflict: Covert Political Action, Cognitive Warfare and Cyberweapons
Chapter 7 - Individual and Collective Responsibility for Cybersecurity: Webs of Prevention
Conclusion: Ethical Guidelines
Bibliography
Index