Journal of Information Ethics, Vol. 27, No. 2 (Fall 2018)

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About the Book

BACK ISSUE
This is a single back issue only. To order a current subscription, or for more information, please visit the journal’s web page at www.journal-info-ethics.com. Back issues from earlier volumes are available for order subject to availability. Also, single issues of the current volume may be ordered one at a time. The charge for single issues for institutions is $75 per issue (excluding postage). Orders from individuals are also welcome, and the charge for individuals is $30 (excluding postage).

About the Author(s)

Robert Hauptman is professor emeritus of St. Cloud State University and editor of the Journal of Information Ethics.

Bibliographic Details

Edited by Robert Hauptman
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 196pp.
Bibliographic Info:
Copyright Date: 2019
ISSN: 1061-9321
Imprint: McFarland

Table of Contents

Special Issue: The Right to Be Forgotten
Honorary Guest Editor: Katie Chamberlain Kritikos
Table of Contents
Editor’s Note 3
Editorial: Expunge, Forget, Recall (Robert Hauptman) 5
Columns
Intellectual Freedom
Intellectual Freedom Equals Individual Freedom (Judy Anderson) 7
Ethics in the Cultural and Educational Industries
The Perils of Competition (Juris Dilevko) 13
Current Issues
To Censor or Not to Censor: An Examination of Inside Higher Education’s “Comment Policy” (G. Tod Slone) 17
Current Issues
A Mildly Radical Solution to Privacy Encroachments (Robert Hauptman) 22
Articles: the right to be forgotten
Should We Have a Right to Be Forgotten? A Critique of Key
Arguments Underlying This Question (Herman T. Tavani) 26
The Right to Forget, Obliterate, Erase: Defending Personal
Data Privacy in the Digital Age (Katie Chamberlin Kritikos) 47
The Law and Economics of Recognizing the Right to Be
Forgotten in an Era of Fake News (Tomas A. Lipinski) 66
A Balancing Act: The Right to Be Forgotten and Libraries (Stephen Wyber) 81
The Right to Be Forgotten and the Domains of Identity (Kaliya Young) 98
Privacy Literacy and Its Problems (Thilo Hagendorff) 127
Additional Articles
Information Ethics as a Conserving Activity: November 8, 2016 (John Buschman) 146
Are No Two Snowflakes Exactly Alike? (David Henige) 163
Reviews 171
Article Alerts 187

Book Reviews & Awards

• “The only periodical exclusively devoted to all of the issues…. Diverse topics”—Choice

• “Noteworthy for the currency of its subject…intellectually stimulating…a fine blend of the practical and theoretical…a valuable source”—Library Journal

• “Points to the need for thoughtful exploration of the place of information (and of librarians) in the good (‘ethical’) life, both at the individual and the social levels”—C&RL News

• “Interesting and informative”—SRRT Newsletter

• “Interesting mix of contributors…lengthy book reviews”—American Librarians

• “Welcome…interesting and thought-provoking…highly recommend it for all libraries”—ALR

• “Readable…important”—People’s Culture

• “Courageous”—Sipapu

• “Some of the sharpest and most stimulating essays on the subject…responds to a very real need in the field. …excellent coverage of this difficult and increasingly complicated subject…a valuable and practical tool”—InfoManage

• “Thought-provoking columns and articles in a readable style…useful to anyone concerned with information in society. …recommended”—Special Libraries

• “Strongly recommended”—Journal of Academic Librarianship

• “Carefully edited…provide[s] readers with full discussions on [the] issues”—Library and Information Science Annual

• “Well-written pieces by librarians and other scholars. This thought-provoking journal should be required reading for students in library and information science programs and by practitioners and policymakers”—Magazines for Libraries