All Stories

  1. Models for Classifying AI Systems: the Switch, the Ladder, and the Matrix
  2. Robots, Jobs, Taxes, and Responsibilities
  3. Even good bots fight: The case of Wikipedia
  4. A Plea for Non-naturalism as Constructionism
  5. Group Privacy
  6. New Civic Responsibilities for Online Service Providers
  7. The Moral Responsibilities of Online Service Providers
  8. Group Privacy: A Defence and an Interpretation
  9. Introduction: A New Perspective on Privacy
  10. Conclusion: What Do We Know About Group Privacy?
  11. What is data ethics?
  12. Faultless responsibility: on the nature and allocation of moral responsibility for distributed moral actions
  13. The ethics of algorithms: Mapping the debate
  14. Crowdsourced science: sociotechnical epistemology in the e-research paradigm
  15. What a maker’s knowledge could be
  16. Technology and Democracy: Three Lessons from Brexit
  17. The Design of the Internet’s Architecture by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and Human Rights
  18. On Human Dignity as a Foundation for the Right to Privacy
  19. Introduction: The Philosophy of Information
  20. Mature Information Societies—a Matter of Expectations
  21. The Ethics of Cloud Computing
  22. Introduction
  23. The Ethics of Big Data: Current and Foreseeable Issues in Biomedical Contexts
  24. Tolerant Paternalism: Pro-ethical Design as a Resolution of the Dilemma of Toleration
  25. The Debate on the Moral Responsibilities of Online Service Providers
  26. A Proxy Culture
  27. The New Grey Power
  28. The anti-counterfeiting trade agreement: the ethical analysis of a failure, and its lessons
  29. The Ethics of Big Data: Current and Foreseeable Issues in Biomedical Contexts
  30. Free Online Services: Enabling, Disenfranchising, Disempowering
  31. Should You Have The Right To Be Forgotten On Google? Nationally, Yes. Globally, No.
  32. The Politics of Uncertainty
  33. The Onlife Manifesto
  34. Trois leçons philosophiques de Turing et la philosophie de l’information
  35. On malfunctioning software
  36. Introduction
  37. Luciano Floridi—Commentary on the Onlife Manifesto
  38. Hyperhistory and the Philosophy of Information Policies
  39. Technoscience and Ethics Foresight
  40. Toleration and the Design of Norms
  41. Keynote talk
  42. The Latent Nature of Global Information Warfare
  43. Technological Unemployment, Leisure Occupation, and the Human Project
  44. Open Data, Data Protection, and Group Privacy
  45. The Ethics of Information Warfare
  46. Erratum
  47. Introduction
  48. Big Data and Information Quality
  49. Group privacy
  50. The Philosophy of Information Quality
  51. What Is Visualization Really For?
  52. Information Quality, Data and Philosophy
  53. The human project
  54. Artificial artificial intelligence
  55. The latent nature of global information warfare
  56. The Rise of the MASs
  57. Artificial Agents and Their Moral Nature
  58. Things
  59. The Ethics of Information
  60. Epilogue
  61. Artificial evil
  62. Distributed morality
  63. Ethics after the information revolution
  64. What is information ethics?
  65. The method of abstraction
  66. Information ethics as e-nvironmental ethics
  67. Information ethics and the foundationalist debate
  68. The intrinsic value of the infosphere
  69. The morality of artificial agents
  70. The constructionist values of homo poieticus
  71. The tragedy of the Good Will
  72. The informational nature of selves
  73. The ontological interpretation of informational privacy
  74. Information business ethics
  75. Global information ethics
  76. In defence of information ethics
  77. E-ducation and the Languages of Information
  78. Perception and Testimony as Data Providers
  79. Luciano Floridi e os problemas filosóficos da informação: da representação à modelização
  80. Information closure and the sceptical objection
  81. Technology’s In-Betweeness
  82. Introduction
  83. What is A Philosophical Question?
  84. Information Quality
  85. A Defence of the Principle of Information Closure against the Sceptical Objection
  86. Infraethics
  87. Spreading ignorance equally
  88. Life on Google earth
  89. What is information quality?
  90. Distributed Morality in an Information Society
  91. Big Data and Their Epistemological Challenge
  92. An analysis of information visualisation
  93. Technologies of the Self
  94. Turing's three philosophical lessons and the philosophy of information
  95. Hyperhistory and the Philosophy of Information Policies
  96. Degenerate Epistemology
  97. The Road to the Philosophy of Information
  98. DIY Publishing
  99. The fourth revolution
  100. Prehistory, history and hyperhistory
  101. Faster than light?
  102. The search for small patterns in big data
  103. The New Ethical Responsibilities of Internet Service Providers
  104. The Informational Nature of Personal Identity
  105. The Construction of Personal Identities Online
  106. Children of the Fourth Revolution
  107. On the Morality of Artificial Agents
  108. Energy, Risks, and Metatechnology
  109. The Philosophy of Information: Ten Years Later
  110. Index
  111. Front Matter
  112. A DEFENCE OF CONSTRUCTIONISM: PHILOSOPHY AS CONCEPTUAL ENGINEERING
  113. The Philosophy of Information
  114. What is the philosophy of information?
  115. The logic of being informed
  116. Understanding epistemic relevance
  117. Semantic information and the network theory of account
  118. Consciousness, agents, and the knowledge game
  119. Against digital ontology
  120. A defence of informational structural realism
  121. Open problems in the philosophy of information
  122. The method of levels of abstraction
  123. Semantic information and the veridicality thesis
  124. Outline of a theory of strongly semantic information
  125. The symbol grounding problem
  126. Action-based semantics
  127. Semantic information and the correctness theory of truth
  128. The logical unsolvability of the Gettier problem
  129. Harmonising Physis and Techne: The Mediating Role of Philosophy
  130. The case for e-trust
  131. The machine language of love
  132. Just cyberwar theory
  133. Enveloping the world for AI
  134. Is whistleblowing wrong?
  135. Biblioteconomia e Ciência da Informação (BCI) como filosofia da informação aplicada: uma reavaliação
  136. Semantic information and the network theory of account
  137. Semantic Information and the Correctness Theory of Truth
  138. The Philosophy of Information as a Conceptual Framework
  139. The Philosophy of Information as a Conceptual Framework
  140. Levels of abstraction and the Turing test
  141. Preface
  142. Ethics after the Information Revolution
  143. Information ethics
  144. Epilogue: The ethics of the information society in a globalized world
  145. The Cambridge Handbook of Information and Computer Ethics
  146. References
  147. THE PHILOSOPHY OF INFORMATION: TEN YEARS LATER
  148. Information, possible worlds and the cooptation of scepticism
  149. Introduction to the special issue on the nature and scope of information
  150. Information
  151. Introduction
  152. 1. The Information Revolution
  153. 2. The Language of Information
  154. 3. Mathematical Information
  155. 4. Semantic Information
  156. 5. Physical Information
  157. 6. Biological information
  158. 7. Economic Information
  159. 8. The Ethics of Information
  160. The rediscovery and posthumous influence of scepticism
  161. Artificial Companions and their philosophical challenges
  162. Network Ethics: Information and Business Ethics in a Networked Society
  163. Arsenic and new health
  164. Update your personal online identity
  165. The philosophy of information
  166. Kindling for the bonfire of book ownership
  167. Network Ethics: Information and Business Ethics in a Networked Society
  168. The Information Society and Its Philosophy: Introduction to the Special Issue on “The Philosophy of Information, Its Nature, and Future Developments”
  169. Information Technology
  170. The ethics of information transparency
  171. Introduction
  172. Web 2.0 vs. the Semantic Web: A Philosophical Assessment
  173. Philosophical Conceptions of Information
  174. Why we need e-nvironmentalism
  175. Get ready for cyberwar
  176. The illogical use of logic
  177. It is not the machine, it’s the judge
  178. Artificial Companions and their Philosophical Challenges
  179. A Subjectivist Interpretation of Relevant Information
  180. Turing’s Imitation Game: Still an Impossible Challenge for All Machines and Some Judges––An Evaluation of the 2008 Loebner Contest
  181. The enduring scandal of deduction
  182. Logical fallacies as informational shortcuts
  183. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE'S NEW FRONTIER: ARTIFICIAL COMPANIONS AND THE FOURTH REVOLUTION
  184. Information ethics: a reappraisal
  185. The Method of Levels of Abstraction
  186. Foundations of Information Ethics
  187. Against digital ontology
  188. Information Ethics: Its Nature and Scope
  189. TRENDS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF INFORMATION
  190. The perils of the swap shop
  191. Are pets electric?
  192. How would you rate this article?
  193. Silver surfers should be Olympians too
  194. Understanding Epistemic Relevance
  195. A Praxical Solution of the Symbol Grounding Problem
  196. A defence of informational structural realism
  197. A Look into the Future Impact of ICT on Our Lives
  198. Global Information Ethics
  199. The arrival of second philosophy
  200. The trade in pounds for pixels could be heading underground
  201. Time travel offers a whole new Vista, or vice-versa...
  202. Information ethics: Agents, artefacts and new cultural perspectives
  203. Four challenges for a theory of informational privacy
  204. Information technologies and the tragedy of the Good Will
  205. Information ethics, its nature and scope
  206. Informational privacy and its ontological interpretation
  207. Ética de la información: su naturaleza y alcance
  208. Informational privacy and its ontological interpretation
  209. Luciano Floridi takes over our regular look at the web
  210. Why has the verbal dominated over the visual?
  211. Will ITentities be the next great technological revolution?
  212. From Gogol to Google
  213. The Ontological Interpretation of Informational Privacy
  214. The Philosophy of Presence: From Epistemic Failure to Successful Observation
  215. Solving the symbol grounding problem: a critical review of fifteen years of research
  216. Consciousness, Agents and the Knowledge Game
  217. Editorial Introduction – Ethics of New Information Technology
  218. Information ethics, its nature and scope
  219. Is Semantic Information Meaningful Data?
  220. How to Do Philosophy Informationally
  221. On the Morality of Artificial Agents
  222. Open Problems in the Philosophy of Information
  223. Outline of a Theory of Strongly Semantic Information
  224. The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information
  225. Information
  226. The tragedy of the digital commons
  227. Information inspiration
  228. The renaissance of epistemology
  229. The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information
  230. The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information
  231. The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information
  232. The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information
  233. What is the Philosophy of Information?
  234. On defining library and information science as applied philosophy of information
  235. Information Ethics
  236. Ancient Scepticism and the Sceptical Tradition (review)
  237. Ethics in the infosphere
  238. Does Information Have a Moral Worth in Itself?
  239. Mathematical Skepticism: A Sketch with Historian in Foreground
  240. Scepticism and Animal Rationality: the Fortune of Chrysippus’ Dog in the History of Western Thought
  241. Followers of French Fashions: Neo-Cartesianism and Analytic Epistemology
  242. Scepticism and the Foundation of Epistemology
  243. Brave.Net.World: the Internet as a disinformation superhighway?
  244. Internet: Which Future for Organized Knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion?
  245. GENERAL INDEX
  246. APPENDIX: DEFINITIONS, FORMULATIONS AND QUESTIONS
  247. Preliminary Material
  248. BIBLIOGRAPHY
  249. Internet : Frankenstein ou Pygmalion
  250. CHAPTER ONE: THE OBJECT: ON THE NATURE OF KNOWLEDGES
  251. CHAPTER FIVE: THE SOLUTIONS OF THE PROBLEM: A PHENOMENOLOGY
  252. CONCLUSION: THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE DISSOLUTION: THREE FUTURE TASKS
  253. CHAPTER SIX: THE DISSOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM: A PROPOSAL
  254. CHAPTER FOUR: THE PROBLEM WITH THE THEORY: A MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS
  255. CHAPTER TWO: THE THEORY OF THE OBJECT: ON THE NATURE OF EPISTEMOLOGY
  256. CHAPTER THREE: THE PROBLEM WITH THE THEORY: A HISTORICAL RECONSTRUCTION
  257. CHAPTER SEVEN: AGAINST THE DISSOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM: THREE OBJECTIONS
  258. The Internet: Which future for organised knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion? Part 1
  259. The Internet: Which future for organised knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion? Part 2
  260. Internet: which future for organized knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion?
  261. From Data to Semantic Information
  262. Storia e multimedia. Atti del Settimo Congresso Internazionale/ Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress Association for History & Computing, Bologna 1992, a cura di/edited by Francesca Bocchi & Peter Denley. Bologna: Grafis Edizioni, 1994. pp...
  263. Cupiditas veri videndi:Pierre de Villemandy's dogmatic vs. Cicero's sceptical interpretation of ‘man's desire to know
  264. The Diffusion of Sextus Empiricus's Works in the Renaissance
  265. The problem of the justification of a theory of knowledge
  266. The problem of the justification of a theory of knowledge
  267. How to Account for Information
  268. Global Information Ethics
  269. Global Information Ethics
  270. Global Information Ethics
  271. Global Information Ethics
  272. Global Information Ethics
  273. How to Account for Information
  274. Global Information Ethics