Saturday, January 31, 2009

Postdoctoral Research Position in Ontology

The National Center for Biomedical Ontology seeks applicants for a post-doctoral research position to work on projects relating to applications of ontology in medicine and biology. The successful candidate will work with ontology researchers in the New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences in Buffalo, New York. He or she will have expertise in at least two of the following areas: ontology, logic, philosophy of science, bioinformatics, biology, medicine, computer science. Further details are available from Barry Smith or under posting number 0900040 at http://ubjobs.buffalo.edu.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

THE INFLUENCERS

Eva and Franco Mattes aka 0100101110101101.ORG and Bani present:

THE INFLUENCERS
Festival of media action and radical entertainment

February 5-6-7 2009
Center of Contemporary Culture Barcelona, Spain
http://www.theinfluencers.org

featuring: BLU, Improv Everywhere, Julius Von Bismarck, Survival Research Labs, Swoon, Wolfgang Staehle, Wu Ming, Ztohoven


Welcome to the 5th edition of The Influencers!
Curated by Eva and Franco Mattes aka 0100101110101101.ORG and Bani, The Influencers is a cult festival exploring unconventional weapons of mass communication. Over the past six years The Influencers has been defined as a gallery of unclassifiable projects, an investigation on guerrilla communication, a demonstration of present-day science fiction, a talk show you won't see on TV. The Influencers is a three intense days event spent interweaving tales of subversion, manipulation and the transformation of live elements of contemporary
culture.

See you all in Barcelona!


More Info: Cristina Diaz
cristina @ theinfluencers.org / +34 637 444 511

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Philosophy of Virtuality: Deliberation, Trust, Offence and Virtues

Trondheim, NTNU, Dragvoll - March 9-13, 2009

Lecturers (course)
Prof. Charles Ess, Drury University, USA
Prof. John Weckert, Charles Sturt University, Australia
Associate professor May Thorseth, NTNU, Norway
PhD Research fellow Johnny Hartz Søraker, Twente University, Netherlands

Further contributors to workshop part (which is part of the course)
Dr. Annamaria Carusi, Oxford University, UK
Prof. Dag Elgesem, University of Bergen, Norway
(One or two more contributors)

There will be a combination of plenary lectures, presentations and discussions of essay proposals.

Course description
Virtuality will be scrutinized from different perspectives in this combined course and workshop. We believe that virtuality is philosophically and ethically relevant to a range of different aspects of life in a world where most people make use of modern information and communication technologies - most obviously, the Internet, but certainly also Internet-enabled mobile devices. And, as online communications become increasingly interwoven in our lives in the developed world, the 1990s’ distinction between offline and online becomes increasingly limited in contemporary analyses of the Internet and its various interactions with our lives.

Some questions: How might virtual worlds contribute to deliberation online?. How do we draw the line between offenses in online and offline worlds? How is it possible to establish online trust? How do we resolve the ethical challenges evoked by new communication technologies - especially as these challenges intersect with diverse cultural values? Emotivist and rationalist accounts of virtual worlds will be considered. Virtue ethics approach to new technologies will also be discussed.

Credit points
7.5 credits will be given for completed course (requires writing and submitting one essay by the end of the course).

Adressees
PhD candidates, graduate students (course, workshop) and scholars (workshop)

Reading list
More information soon.

Lectures (course)
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: More details soon

2 double lectures each day (1 lecture = 90 minutes, including a 15 minutes break in the middle). In addition, there will be presentations and discussions of essay proposals.

Overview of lectures to be announced.

Thursday, Friday (course + workshop):

3 – 4 single lectures á 45 minutes each day and a concluding plenary session on Friday.

Registration or questions
Please send an email to may.thorseth@hf.ntnu.no. Upon registration, please provide the following information: Your full name, position/institutional belonging, and postal address.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Latin American Conference on Computing and Philosophy

LA-CAP09 - Call for Papers
COMPUTING AND PHILOSOPHY: LA-CAP 2009
Mexico City, Mexico, June 22-23, 2009

LA-CAP09 is the first Latin American Conference on Computing and Philosophy will be held on the Campus of the National University of Mexico (UNAM) in Mexico City, Mexico. One of the aims of this conference is to build the Latin American section of the International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP): see IACAP for further informations.

Conference Chair: Francisco Hernández Quiroz (UNAM – México)
Juan Manuel Durán (UNC - Argentina)

IMPORTANT DATES

• March 1, 2009. End of submission of extended abstract.
• March 29, 2009. Notification of acceptance.
• May 17, 2009. Early registration deadline.
• June 22-23, 2009. Conference.


KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

• Prof. Wilfried Sieg. Carnegie Mellon. USA.
• Prof. Víctor Rodríguez. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Argentina

We are expecting the confirmation of two more keynote speakers. They will be announced in the website.

PROGRAM
The International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP) exists to promote scholarly dialogue and research on all aspects of the computational and informational turn, and on the use of information and communication technologies in the service of philosophy. Besides to serve as a regional forum for interested researches in the area, LA-CAP 2009 intends to lay the foundations for a Latin American affiliate of IACAP.

As the first meeting in the area, we would like to keep a scope as wide as possible within the common ground of Computing and Philosophy. We invite papers that address all topics related to computing and philosophy, including cross- and interdisciplinary work that explores the computational turn in new ways. Possible (but not exclusive) research areas are:

- Artificial Intelligence / Cognitive Science
- Artificial Life / Computer Modeling in Biology / Biological Information / Biocomputation
- Information and Computer Ethics / Ethical and Political Dimensions of ICTs in Globalization
- Culture and Society
- Logics
- Metaphysics (Distributed Processing, Emergent Properties, Formal Ontology, etc.)
- Philosophy of Computer Science
- Philosophy of Information and Information Technology
- IT and Gender Research, Feminist Technoscience Studies
- Robotics
- Virtual Reality
- Computational Linguistics
- Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Problem of Consciousness and Cognition
- Computer-based Learning and Teaching Strategies and Resources & The Impact of Distance Learning on the Teaching of Philosophy and Computing
- Computer-Mediated Communication
- Distance Education and Electronic Pedagogy
- Online Resources for Philosophy
- New Models of Logic Software
- Electronic Publishing
- Computer Simulations

SUBMISSION OF PAPERS

Authors should submit an electronic version of an extended abstract (total word count approximately 1000). The file should also contain a 300 word abstract that will be used for the conference web site/booklet. To submit papers visit the submission page at the website. Please keep in mind that the IACAP discourages participants from reading their papers to the audience. (Many presenters prepare slides using some software package. However, these need not be submitted with your original paper.)

The IACAP discourages "show-and-tell" demonstrations, but welcomes submissions that show a new and interesting application of computers to philosophy. Submissions in this category should consist of a 1,500-word abstract outlining what is innovative about the application and the questions pertinent to philosophy that your demonstration will raise.

For panels, please submit a 1,000-word summary of the panel as a whole, along with 300 to 500-word abstracts for each of its various components.

The conference will be accepting electronic submissions appropriately prepared for blind review on or before March 1st, 2009. Additional details will be posted to the conference website (click on the title of this blog).

This conference is one of several regional conferences associated with the International Association for Computing and Philosophy. To learn more about the IACAP, including its other conferences and membership details, visit the organization's website at http://ia-cap.org

IMPORTANT INFORMATION

As announced previously, LA-CAP will take place next June 22-23, 2009 at Mexico City. The conference CFP and related information can be found at http://ia-cap.org/la-cap09.

We would also like to call your attention to the fact that members of IACAP will enjoy a discounted conference fee. IACAP has recently moved to a fixed-date membership system, however - with December 1 of the current year as the deadline for membership through November 30, 2009.

Accordingly, if you plan to attend LA-CAP and would like to take advantage of the conference discount for IACAP members, we encourage you to join IACAP prior to the December 1, 2008, deadline.

Membership is currently set as:

Students: $10.00

Ordinary: $30.00

Supporting: $50.00 or more

You can register your membership online, click here.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

History and Philosophy of Computability at CiE 2009

CiE 2009 is the fifth in a series of conferences organised by CiE (Computability in Europe), a European network of mathematicians, logicians, computer scientists, philosophers, physicists and others interested in new developments in computability and their underlying significance for the real world. Previous meetings took place in Amsterdam (2005), Swansea (2006), Siena (2007) and Athens (2008).

The scope of the conference is broad, and includes the history and philosophy of computability and computer science. The Programme Committee especially encourages submissions in these areas.

The deadline for submission of papers has just been extended to February 1.

For the call for papers, click on the title of this blog.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

EXPLANATION-AWARE COMPUTING (ExaCt 2009)

Call for papers, for the 4th International and IJCAI-09 Workshop on
EXPLANATION-AWARE COMPUTING (ExaCt 2009)

11-12 July 2009, Pasadena, CA, USA
Paper submission deadline: March 6, 2009**


Both within AI systems and in interactive systems, the ability to explain reasoning processes and results can have substantial impact. Within the field of knowledge-based systems, explanations have been considered as an important link between humans and machines. There, their main purpose has been to increase the confidence of the user in the system’s result (persuasion) or the system as a whole (satisfaction), by providing evidence of how it was derived (transparency). More recently, in recommender systems good explanations have also been used to help to inspire user trust and loyalty (trust), and make it quicker and easier (efficiency) for users to find what they want (effectiveness). Additional AI research has focused on how computer
systems can themselves use explanations, for example to form new generalizations (learning). Explanations have also been used to increase the external user's understanding of a domain (education).

Current interest in mixed-initiative systems provides a new context in which explanation issues may play a crucial role. When knowledge-based systems are partners in an interactive socio-technical process, with incomplete and changing problem descriptions, communication between human and software systems is a central part. Thus explanations exchanged between human agents and software agents may play an important role in mixed-initiative problem solving.

This workshop series aims to draw on multiple perspectives on explanation, to examine how explanation can be applied to further the development of robust and dependable systems, and increase transparency, user sense of control (scrutability), trust, acceptance and decision support.

If you would like to participate in discussions on this topic or like to receive further information about this workshop you might consider joining the Yahoo!-group.

Information on explanation research is also collected at http://on-explanation.net.

GOALS AND AUDIENCE
We invite original contributions to the research on explanations from a variety of areas and communities such as computer science, cognitive science, linguistics, philosophy of science, psychology, and education. In addition to presentations and discussions of invited contributions and invited talks, this workshop will offer organised and open sessions for targeted discussions and creating an interdisciplinary community. Demonstration sessions will provide the opportunity to showcase explanation-enabled/-aware applications.

TOPICS OF INTEREST
Suggested topics for contributions (not restricted to IT views):
Models and knowledge representations for explanations
Integrating application and explanation knowledge
Explanation-awareness in (designing) applications
Methodologies for developing explanation-aware systems
Explanations and learning
Context-aware explanation vs. explanation-aware context
Confidence and explanations
Privacy, security, trust, and explanation
Empirical studies of explanations
Requirements and needs for explanations to support human understanding
Explanation of complex, autonomous systems
Co-operative explanation
Visualising explanations
Dialogue management and natural language generation

Submissions on additional topics are welcome as well.

SUBMISSIONS AND STYLE
Workshop submissions will be electronic, in pdf format only, using the EasyChair submission system linked from the workshop website.

Papers must be written in English and not exceed 12 pages in the Springer LNCS format. At least one author of each accepted paper must register for the workshop and present the contribution in order to be published in the workshop proceedings. The organising committee is considering editing a special issue of an appropriate international journal (e.g., Kluwer’s Knowledge-based Systems, Elsevier’s Expert Systems with Applications, or Springer’s
Information System Frontiers) depending on the number and quality of the submissions.

Those wishing to participate providing a live system demonstration should submit a proposal (1-2 pages). Those wishing to participate without paper or demo submission should submit a brief synopsis of their relevant work or at least a brief statement of interest.

Non-archival working notes will be produced containing the papers presented at the workshop.

If you have questions please contact the chairs at this email address.

IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline: March 6, 2009
Notification of acceptance: April 17, 2009
Camera-ready versions of papers: May 8, 2009
IJCAI-09 Workshop Program: July 11-12, 2009


WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
The schedule will be made available on the workshop website. See the workshop website for an agenda overview und links to past workshops.


INVITED TALKS
Talks by two invited speakers, each representing a different community addressing explanation issues, are planned.


CHAIRS
Thomas R. Roth-Berghofer, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence DFKI GmbH, Germany
thomas.roth-berghofer at dfki de

Nava Tintarev, Department of Computer Science, University Of Aberdeen, UK
n.tintare at abdn ac uk

David B. Leake
Computer Science Department, Indiana University, USA
leake at cs indiana edu


PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Agnar Aamodt, Norwegian Uni of Science and Technology (NTNU)
David W. Aha, Navy Center for Applied Research in AI, USA
Patrick Brézillon, LIP6, France
Jörg Cassens, NTNU
Francisco Javier Díez, UNED Madrid, Spain
Babak Esfandiari, Carleton University, Canada
Pierre Grenon, IFOMIS, University of Saarbrücken, Germany
Anders Kofod-Petersen, SINTEF, Norway
Hector Muñoz-Avila, Lehigh University, USA
Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, University of Texas, El Paso, USA
Enric Plaza, IIIA-CSIC, Spain
Michael M. Richter, University of Calgary, Canada
Sven Schwarz, DFKI, Germany
Gheorghe Tecuci, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA
Douglas Walton, University of Winnipeg, Canada

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Workshop on Identity in the Information Society

The Second Multidisciplinary Workshop on Identity in the Information Society (IDIS 09): Call for Papers

Date: 5 June 2009
Venue: London School of Economics, London, UK

Following the successful IDIS 08 workshop held at Lago Maggiore in June 2008, we are pleased to release a Call for Papers for the second Annual Workshop on Identity in the Information Society (IDIS 09), to be held on June 5, 2009 in London, England, at the campus of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

The workshop aims to provide an opportunity to present leading edge research, exchange ideas, encourage collaboration, and build communities across the various research groups working on contemporary identity topics and in related fields of privacy and security.

The theme of the Second Multidisciplinary Workshop on Identity in the Information Society is “Identity and the Impact of Technology”. The workshop will seek to explore the relationship between the ways in which identity and technology have mutually shaped each other. New technologies for the control and management of identity are being developed and introduced daily by public administrations and online businesses; technologies which are designed to alter the way that citizens and consumers interact with these bodies. New notions of identity are being made possible by technological innovation.

Just some of the questions that are raised in this area are:
· How far has technology altered prevailing notions of identity?
· What new technologies are emerging and what might be their impacts?
· To what extent is it possible to inscribe legal requirements into technologies of identity, and with what results?

Confirmed Keynote Speaker:
Kevin W. Bowyer,
Schubmehl-Prein Professor and Department Chair
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
University of Notre Dame, USA

We invite papers that discuss the impact of technologies used in the management of identity, and the use of personal information with information and communication technologies. We welcome contributions ranging across different disciplinary areas, reflecting the broad nature of the topic with its interwoven concerns of law, technology, and information systems alongside other social, political and management issues.

Accepted papers will be considered for publication in Identity in the Information Society Journal (IDIS). Following the workshop, revised versions of the papers presented will undergo peer review to determine their suitability to be published in IDIS.

Important dates:
Submission of papers (4000-6000 words): 9 April 2009
Notification to authors: 1 May 2009
Identity in the Information Society Workshop: 5 June 2009
Submission of revised papers to IDIS Journal: 6th July 2009
Feedback from peer review to authors: 26th September 2009
Submission of revised papers: 28th November 2008
Publication in IDIS Journal from January 2010

Paper submission through the Editorial Manager of the IDIS Journal at: http://www.editorialmanager.com/idis/ . When submitting your paper online, please be sure to submit it as an “IDIS Workshop Paper”.

Monday, January 12, 2009

The Nature and Scope of Information

The IEG organises a series of philosophy research seminars this term on the philosophy of information, entitled "The Nature and Scope of Information". The seminar series is kindly supported and hosted by the Department of Engineering Science.

The seminars are meant to provide an opportunity, to members of our research group and other invitees, to interact with leading philosophers, scientists and scholars working on information-related issues, broadly conceived. For more information about the seminars, the speakers and the location please visit the website.

Here is a quick guide.

In Hilary, there will be four seminars, which will take place on Tuesdays, from 16.30 until 18.30, room LR7, Department of Engineering Science, Parks Road, Oxford.

Programme:
  • 27th January - Hannes Leitgeb, University of Bristol, The Prospects of Formal Philosophy.
  • 10th February - Jon Williamson, University of Kent, Do probability and causality exist?
  • 24th February - Richard Bradley, London School of Economics, Conditionals and the Unification of Decision Theory.
  • 10th March - Michael Wooldridge, University of Liverpool, Title tba.

Please note that the format of the seminars is slightly unorthodox. We try to keep the group small (no "general public" and only invited participants); we provide plenty of time for the presentation (1 hour) and for the following Q&A session (1 hour); but, above all, we invite the speaker to provide a detailed overview of his or her own research, rather than a particular topic-oriented paper. Presentations are in PowerPoint. There is no paper reading.

At the end of the seminar, there may be a dinner with the speaker and we may carry on the conversation over a glass of wine.

Participation to the seminars is free, but subject to availability of places, so if you wish to register please do send an email to Dr Elizabeth Back.


Thursday, January 08, 2009

2009 IFAAMAS Award for Influential Papers in Agents and Multiagent Systems

Call for Nominations DEADLINE: 04:02:2009

The International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems has established an award to recognize publications that have made influential and long-lasting contributions to the field.

Candidates for this award are papers that have proved a key result, led to the development of a new subfield, demonstrated a significant new application or system, or simply presented a new way of thinking about a topic that has proved influential. A list of previous winners of this award is appended below.

This award is presented annually at the AAMAS Conference, in this case AAMAS-09 in Budapest in May. Winning papers must have been published at least 10 years before the award presentation, therefore this year's eligible set comprises papers published in 1999 or earlier, in any recognized forum (journal, conference, workshop).

To nominate a publication for this award, please send the full reference plus a brief statement (150 words or fewer) about the significance of the paper to Michael Wellman (chair of the 2009 award cmte), wellman@umich.edu.

Nominations are due by 4 February 2009.

2009 Influential Paper Award Committee:
Michael Wellman (chair), Sarit Kraus, Hideyuki Nakashima, Milind Tambe

Previous Award Winners

2008
BRATMAN, M. E., ISRAEL, D. J. & POLLACK, M. E. (1988) Plans and
resource-bounded practical reasoning. Computational Intelligence, 4,
349-355.
DURFEE, E. H. & LESSER, V. R. (1991) Partial global planning: A
coordination framework for distributed hypothesis formation. IEEE
Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 21, 1167-1183.

2007
GROSZ, B. J. & KRAUS, S. (1996) Collaborative plans for complex group
action. Artificial Intelligence, 86, 269-357.
RAO, A. S. & GEORGEFF, M. P. (1991) Modeling rational agents within a
BDI-architecture. Second International Conference on Principles of
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning.
ROSENSCHEIN, J. S. & GENESERETH, M. R. (1985) Deals among rational
agents. Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial
Intelligence.

2006
COHEN, P. R. & LEVESQUE, H. J. (1990) Intention is choice with
commitment. Artificial Intelligence, 42, 213-261.
DAVIS, R. & SMITH, R. G. (1983) Negotiation as a metaphor for
distributed problem solving. Artificial Intelligence, 20, 63-109.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

AISB 2009 Symposium: Killer robots or friendly fridges: the social understanding of Artificial Intelligence

OVERVIEW
For the non-specialist, the whole notion of Artificial Intelligence challenges fundamental understandings of what it is to be human, with enormous implications for how we conceive ourselves, our artefacts and our societies.

AI’s foundational goal was the construction of autonomous sentience. Yet, 55 years afterTuring’s seminal paper, publicly visible achievements, beyond science fiction speculations or media exaggerations, still lie in faltering steps in voice and image recognition, surveillance, computer games and virtual environments, not in truly intelligent everyday machines.

This symposium will offer a major forum for the discussion of the social understanding of Artificial Intelligence, in particular the curious spaces between popular expectations of machines that meet our every whim, fears of humans enslaved or eliminated by crazed super-brains, and the sober reality of toasters that still burn the bread.

At the start of the 21st century, it is timely to reflect not just on the technical achievements and pitfalls of the now mature discipline of Artificial Intelligence, but also on its wider social understanding. While there have always been ill informed concerns about “robots taking over the world”, the reality is both more prosaic and more complex. People have long anthropomorphised complex artefacts which are capable of seemingly autonomous interaction. However, recent advances in the deployment of believable characters and affective systems, both in graphical and robotic form, have rekindled problematic social and ethical questions about our relationships with machines.

This symposium offers a fresh opportunity for interdisciplinary perspectives on the social understanding of Artificial Intelligence, with the strong potential to bring together contemporary research in key technical, social, psychological and philosophical domains

TOPICS WILL INCLUDE:
- AI, Ethics and privacy
- AI and Public Policy
- Portrayal of AI in film, novel and other art forms
- Anthropomorphism and AI
- Attitudes towards robots and graphical characters
- Believability, naturalism and the uncanny valley
- Definitions of human-ness and AI artefacts
- AI and gender
- Social impact of AI
- Social expectations of AI
- Social perceptions of AI
- Social/legal/economic status of AIs
- Social/ethical implications of AI augmentation of humans
- Human/AI construct co-working
- If AIs could talk, would we understand them?
- What is it like to be an AI?

SUBMISSIONS
Submitted papers will also be considered for a special issue of AI and Society

We are seeking submissions of original papers that fit well with the symposium theme and topics. Papers should be no more than 6 pages in length in the AISB convention format (available here). Papers should be submitted in .pdf format to the Easychair site by the submission deadline given below. At least one author of each accepted paper will be required to register and attend the symposium to present their work.

All papers from the AISB convention will be published in the AISB proceedings, with an ISBN number. Authors of papers must sign a copyright declaration (to follow). However, this declaration is not exclusive - it gives AISB the right to publish the paper, but does not prevent the author from publishing it in other venues.

IMPORTANT DATES
5th January 2009 : Submission deadline
2nd February 2009: Deadline for notifications sent to authors
23rd February 2009 : Camera read copies due
8-9 April 2009: Symposium

PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Alison Adams, University of Salford
Ruth Aylett, Heriot-Watt University (co-chair)
Alan Bundy, University of Edinburgh
Bob Colomb, University of Technology, Malaysia
Roddy Cowie, Queens University Belfast
Ylva Fernaeus, Swedish Institute of Computer Science
Rudi Lutz, University of Sussex
Greg Michaelson, Heriot-Watt University (co-chair)
Margit Pohl, Vienna University of Technology
Noel Sharkey, University of Sheffield
Peter Wallis, University of Sheffield

CONTACT DETAILS
Prof Greg Michaelson/Prof Ruth Aylett
Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton, EH14 4AS
0131 451 3422/4189 (phone)
0131 451 3732 (FAX)

Monday, January 05, 2009

Three IACAP Conferences

A reminder that, if you wish to submit papers to any of the next three IACAP (International Association for Computing and Philosophy) conferences, the deadlines are approaching:

NA-CAP submission deadline: February 1st 2009
North-American CAP - Indiana University
http://ia-cap.org/na-cap09/

E-CAP submission deadline: February 23rd 2009
European CAP - Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona
http://ia-cap.org/e-cap09/


LA-CAP submission deadline: March 1st, 2009
Latin-American CAP - National University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico City
http://ia-cap.org/la-cap09/

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Charles Ess: Digital Media Ethics

A new website for Charles Ess' recent book (disclaimer: I wrote the Foreword):

Summary

This is the first textbook on the central ethical issues of digital media, ranging from computers and the Internet to mobile phones. It is also the first book of its kind to consider these issues from a global perspective, introducing ethical theories from multiple cultures. It further utilizes examples from around the world, such as the publication of “the Mohammed Cartoons”; diverse understandings of what “privacy” means in Facebook or MySpace; why pirating CDs and DVDs may be justified in developing countries; and culturally-variable perspectives on sexuality and what counts as “pornography.”

Readers and students thus acquire a global perspective on the central ethical issues of digital media, including privacy, copyright, pornography and violence, and the ethics of cross-cultural communication online. The book is designed for use across disciplines – media and communication studies, computer science and informatics, as well as philosophy. It is up-to-date, accessible and student- and classroom-friendly: each topic and theory is interwoven throughout the volume with detailed sets of questions that foster careful reflection, writing, and discussion into these issues and their possible resolutions. Each chapter further includes additional resources and suggestions for further research and writing.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Dexter

I just spent far too much time enjoying Dexter.

Four quick comments. to feel just a pinch less guilty (no spoilers):
  1. He owns a nice laptop and uses it quite regularly.
  2. He likes databases but we never see him (Seasons 1 and 2) checking Wikipedia (if he did, he would know there is more information about him there than he could stomach).
  3. He is very neat and tidy and almost autistically careful about order, but we never see him running an antivirus, or an anti-malware program.
  4. He is on the phone quite often.
About (1), you may like to know that he uses a Apple (Mac) powerbook (this may explain n. 3) and an Oakley S.I. bag. According to the linked article, the latter is discontinued and can only be bought on eBay.

About (2), just click on http://dexterwiki.sho.com/

About (3), if you fancy some strange furniture, look here. For anything else, try this great website.

About (4), he uses a Motorola i885 on the Boost network but in Season 2 he also seems rather fond of a Motorola Razor, previously owned by his mother's killer, I wonder why.