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Who needs stories if you can get the data?

ISPs in the era of big number crunching

Mireille Hildebrandt

pp. 371-390

In this article, I will investigate to what extent democracy and the Rule of Law require that ISPs as "common carriers' that provide "mere conduit" pre-empt extensive monitoring of the content they carry. I will trace this duty as a moral duty that is bound up with the framework of constitutional democracy, arguing that such monitoring affords unprecedented data-mining operations that could stifle our account of ourselves as moral agents in the novel infosphere.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s13347-011-0041-8

Full citation:

Hildebrandt, M. (2011). Who needs stories if you can get the data?: ISPs in the era of big number crunching. Philosophy & Technology 24 (4), pp. 371-390.

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