On the Principle of Privacy by Design and Its Limits: Technology, Ethics and the Rule of Law

Over the last years lawmakers, privacy commissioners and scholars have discussed the idea of embedding data protection safeguards in ICT and other types of technology, by means of value-sensitive design, AI and legal ontologies, PeCAM platforms, and more.

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Simona Chiodo Viola Schiaffonati   Editors

Italian Philosophy of Technology Socio-Cultural, Legal, Scientific and Aesthetic Perspectives on Technology

Philosophy of Engineering and Technology Volume 35

Editor-in-Chief Pieter E. Vermaas, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Editors Darryl Cressman, Maastricht University, The Netherlands Neelke Doorn, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Byron Newberry, Baylor University, U.S.A Editorial advisory board Philip Brey, Twente University, The Netherlands Louis Bucciarelli, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, U.S.A Michael Davis, Illinois Institute of Technology, U.S.A Paul Durbin, University of Delaware, U.S.A Andrew Feenberg, Simon Fraser University, Canada Luciano Floridi, University of Hertfordshire & University of Oxford, UK Jun Fudano, Kanazawa Institute of Technology, Japan Craig Hanks, Texas State University, U.S.A Sven Ove Hansson, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Vincent F. Hendricks, University of Copenhagen, Denmark & Columbia University, U.S.A Don Ihde, Stony Brook University, U.S.A Billy V. Koen, University of Texas, U.S.A Peter Kroes, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Sylvain Lavelle, ICAM-Polytechnicum, France Michael Lynch, Cornell University, U.S.A Anthonie Meijers, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands Sir Duncan Michael, Ove Arup Foundation, UK Carl Mitcham, Colorado School of Mines, U.S.A Helen Nissenbaum, New York University, U.S.A Alfred Nordmann, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany Joseph Pitt, Virginia Tech, U.S.A Ibo van de Poel, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Daniel Sarewitz, Arizona State University, U.S.A Jon A. Schmidt, Burns & McDonnell, U.S.A Peter Simons, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Jeroen van den Hoven, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands John Weckert, Charles Sturt University, Australia

The Philosophy of Engineering and Technology book series provides the multifaceted and rapidly growing discipline of philosophy of technology with a central overarching and integrative platform. Specifically it publishes edited volumes and monographs in: the phenomenology, anthropology and socio-politics of technology and engineering the emergent fields of the ontology and epistemology of artifacts, design, knowledge bases, and instrumentation engineering ethics and the ethics of specific technologies ranging from nuclear technologies to the converging nano-, bio-, information and cognitive technologies written from philosophical and practitioners’ perspectives and authored by philosophers and practitioners. The series also welcomes proposals that bring these fields together or advance philosophy of engineering and technology in other integrative ways. Proposals should include: A short synopsis of the work or the introduction chapter. The proposed Table of Contents. The CV of the lead author(s). If available: one sample chapter. We aim to make a first decision within 1 month of submission. In case of a positive first deci+sion the work will be provisional

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