default search action
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, Volume 41
Volume 41, Number 1, March 2022
- Clinton J. Andrews:
50 Years of Good Trouble. 3-4 - Jeremy Pitt:
The Principles of Cyber-Anarcho-Socialism. 5-10 - Jordan R. Schoenherr:
The Currency of the Attentional Economy: The Uses and Abuses of Attention in Our World. 11-14 - Clinton J. Andrews:
Preparing to Design Robots for Social Contexts. 15-17 - Mahdi Kafaee, Mostafa Taqavi:
The New York Times Test: An Intersubjective Reconsideration. 18-22 - Vincent Mosco:
Talk Radio's America: How an Industry Took Over a Political Party That Took Over the United States - Brian Rosenwald (Cambridge, MA, USA: Harvard Univ. Press, 2019, 358 pp.). 23-25 - James R. Russell:
Scientists Under Surveillance: The FBI Files - edited by JPat Brown, B. C. D. Lipton, and Michael Morisy (Cambridge, MA, USA: The MIT Press, 2019, 413 + xix pp.). 26-28 - Jacob Ossar:
Why Trust Science? - Naomi Oreskes (Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton Univ. Press, 2019, 360 pp.). 29-31 - Holger Regenbrecht, Jung-Woo Noel Park, Stuart Duncan, Steven Mills, Rosa Lutz, Laurie Lloyd-Jones, Claudia Ott, Bubba Thompson, Dean Whaanga, Robert W. Lindeman, Kris Tong, Rory Clifford, Nadia Jones, Paora Mato, Te Taka Keegan, Hemi Whaanga:
Ātea Presence - Enabling Virtual Storytelling, Presence, and Tele-Co-Presence in an Indigenous Setting. 32-42 - Morteza Rahimi, Mostafa Taqavi, Amin Shafikhani:
Reflection on the Relationship Between Societies and Technologies: The "Global Networked Heterogeneous Co-Construction". 43-53 - Jordan R. Schoenherr:
Whose Privacy, What Surveillance? Dimensions of the Mental Models for Privacy and Security. 54-65 - Harry Surden:
Values Embedded in Legal Artificial Intelligence. 66-74 - Gonzalo Génova, Valentín Moreno Pelayo, M. Rosario González Martín:
A Lesson From AI: Ethics Is Not an Imitation Game. 75-81 - Jeff Robbins:
The Intelligence Factor: Technology and the Missing Link. 82-93 - Christine Perakslis:
A Golden Jubilee: Trumpets, Technology, and Tenacity. 95-96
Volume 41, Number 2, June 2022
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Fifty Years Hence. 3-5 - Jeremy Pitt:
The Digital Transformation and Modern Indentured Servitude. 6-9 - Michael G. Michael, Katina Michael:
Capitalism and the Enchanted Screen: Myths and Allegories in the Digital Age - Aleks Wansbrough (London, U.K.: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021, 232 pp.). 10-13 - A. David Wunsch:
Bored, Lonely, Angry, Stupid: Changing Feelings About Technology - From the Telegraph to Twitter - Luke Fernandez and Susan J. Matt (Cambridge, MA, USA: Harvard Univ. Press, 2019). 14-16 - Eric P. Wenaas:
The Alchemy of Us: How Humans and Matter Transformed One Another - Ainissa Ramirez (Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press, 2020, 328 pp.). 17-19 - Jeremy Pitt, Maria Tzanou:
Special Issue Introduction: Against Modern Indentured Servitude ("I'm Spartacus"). 20-23 - Josiah Ober:
Human Flourishing, Servitude, and Why They Are Incompatible. 24-29 - Katina Michael:
Modern Indentured Servitude in the Gig Economy: A Case Study on the Deregulation of the Taxi Industry in the United States. 30-41 - Roba Abbas, Katina Michael:
Co-Designing Location-Based Services for Individuals Living With Dementia: An Overview of Present and Future Modes of Operation. 42-46 - Jordan Miller:
Social Robots: The Friend of the Future or Mechanical Mistake? 47-48 - Todd L. Pittinsky:
Taking Care With Caregiving Robots. 49-56 - Asimina Mertzani, Jeremy Pitt:
Social Influence and the Normalization of Surveillance Capitalism: Legislation for the Next Generation. 57-63 - Asimina Vasalou:
Reflections on Personalized Games-Based Learning: How Automation Is Shaped Within Everyday School Practices. 64-67 - Thomas Dannhauser:
Digitally Engineered Attention and Energy Theft via Psychological Manipulation. 68-72 - Christine Perakslis:
Eradicating Entitlement to Reduce Susceptibility to Technological Enslavement. 73-77 - Agnieszka Rychwalska:
Shadow (Profiles) in the Dark (Patterns): Who Locked Your Digital Self? 78-83 - Allison Gardner:
Responsibility, Recourse, and Redress: A Focus on the Three R's of AI Ethics. 84-89 - Genevieve Liveley:
AI Futures Literacy. 90-93 - Emma Carmel, Regine Paul:
Peace and Prosperity for the Digital Age? The Colonial Political Economy of European AI Governance. 94-104 - Maria Tzanou:
Modern Servitude and Vulnerable Social Groups: The Problem of the AI Datafication of Poor People and Women. 105-108 - Jeff Robbins:
Jeffrey Robbins - SSIT Loses a Stalwart. 109-110 - George Zarkadakis:
Toward Emancipation Through a Regenerative Digital Economy. 111-112
Volume 41, Number 3, September 2022
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Lifetimes of Involvement With SSIT. 4-6 - Jeremy Pitt:
The Unbelievable Pointlessness of Impact. 7-12 - Zihao Lin:
Accessible America: A History of Disability and Design - Bess Williamson (New York, NY, USA: New York Univ. Press, 2020, 279 pp.). 13-15 - Eric P. Wenaas:
A Pioneer of Connection: Recovering the Life and Work of Oliver Lodge - James Mussell and Graeme Gooday (Pittsburgh, PA, USA: Univ. Pittsburgh Press, 2020, 304 pp.). 16-18 - Merritt Roe Smith:
Revolver: Sam Colt and the Six-Shooter That Changed America - Jim Rasenberger (New York, NY, USA: Scribner, 2020, 436 pp.). 19-21 - Brandiff Caron, Marc Cheong, Jin Sol Kim, Jason Lajoie, Heather A. Love, Ketra A. Schmitt:
Technological Stewardship and Responsible Innovation: A Mindset, an Ethos, and an Interdisciplinary Undertaking. 22-28 - Steven Kelts:
Rethinking the Firm: Finding the Space for Ethics in Innovation. 29-37 - Jordan Richard Schoenherr:
Folkmedical Technologies and the Sociotechnical Systems of Healthcare. 38-49 - Neha Chugh:
Risk Assessment Tools on Trial: AI Systems Go? 50-57 - Mohammed Joe Masoodi, Sam Andrey:
Understanding the Use of Private Messaging Apps in Canada and Links to Disinformation. 58-70 - Sarah Spiekermann, Till Winkler:
Value-Based Engineering With IEEE 7000. 71-80 - Alexandra Morrison, Charles Wallace:
Making It Strange: Disrupting Assumptions About Technology and Ethics in Engineering and Computing Education. 81-90 - Nishan Chelvachandran, Katina Michael:
Digital Design With Children in Mind. 91-95 - Jessica M. Smith:
The Everyday Ethics of Corporate Social Responsibility. 96-97 - Evalyna Bogdan, Shaieree Cottar:
A Serious Role-Playing Game as a Pedagogical Innovation to Strengthen Flood Resilience. 98-100 - Paul Heidebrecht:
PeaceTech. 101-102 - Christine Perakslis:
The Edu-Sci Ecosystem for a Thriving Society: Revisiting Foundations of Responsible Stewardship. 103-104
Volume 41, Number 4, December 2022
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Not a Valediction. 3 - Jeremy Pitt:
Contributive Justice and Self-Actualizing Systems. 4-11 - A. David Wunsch:
Good Pictures: A History of Popular Photography - Kim Bell (Stanford, CA, USA: Stanford Univ. Press, 2020, 323 pp.). 12-15 - Daniene Byrne:
Data Feminism - Catherine D'Ignazio and Lauren F. Klein (Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press, 2020, 314 pp.). 16-18 - A. David Wunsch:
Riding the New York Subway: The Invention of the Modern Passenger - Stefan Höhne (Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press, 2021, 373 pp.). 19-22 - Matthew L. Bolton:
Humanistic Engineering: Engineering for the People. 23-38 - Marc Steen:
Learning From Indigenous Cultures. 39-43 - Robyn Ruttenberg-Rozen, Katelin Hynes:
A Feminist Ethics of Care Within Counterspaces: Supporting Inclusion in Postsecondary ICT Education. 44-53 - Angela Xiao Wu:
Data Science and the PhD Question: The Assetization of the Doctoral Habitus. 54-62 - Raphaël Khoury, Sylvain Hallé:
Are Backdoor Mandates Ethical? - A Position Paper. 63-70 - Christian Rathgeb, Pawel Drozdowski, Dinusha C. Frings, Naser Damer, Christoph Busch:
Demographic Fairness in Biometric Systems: What Do the Experts Say? 71-82 - Lu Kong, Wen Zhao:
Analysis and Countermeasures of Engineers' Ethical Behaviors in China. 83-93 - Javier Aracil:
Utility Versus Curiosity in Technology and Science. 94-98 - Ruth Lewis:
IEEE SSIT Standards Committee Chair Ruth Lewis Honored With 2022 IEEE Standards Medallion. 99 - Christine Perakslis:
An Artful Approach: Reflecting on the Past to Forewarn and Foretell. 100
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.