Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter1. Introduction New Civic Responsibilities for Online Service Providers (Mariarosaria Taddeo & Luciano Floridi). - Part I: Responsibilities and liabilities. - Chapter2. The Debate on the Moral Responsibilities of Online Service Providers (Mariarosaria Taddeo & Luciano Floridi). - Chapter 3. The Immunity of Internet Intermediaries reconsidered? (Gerogios N. Yannopoulos). - Chapter 4. Is Google responsible for providing fair and unbiased results? (Dirk Lewandowski). - Chapter 5. We are the victim here - Data breach notification duties and the duties of victims in the criminal law of democratic states (Burkhard Schafer). - Chapter 6. Did the Romans get it right? A legal analysis of what Google, eBay, UPC TeleKabel Wien and Delfi have in common (Peggy Valcke). - PartII: Business ethics & corporate social responsibilities. - Chapter 7. Responsibilities of OSPs from a Business Ethics Point of View (Christoph Luetge). - Chapter 8. Myth or promise? The corporate socialresponsibilities of online service providers for human rights (Emily Laidlaw). - Chapter 9. Online service providers a new and unique species of the firm? (Robert Wentrup). - Chapter 10. Online service providers as human rights arbiters (Rikke Frank Jørgensen & Anja Møller Pedersen). - Chapter 11. Licensing of user-generated content: why less is mores (Miloš Novovic). - Part III: Users rights & international regulations. - Chapter12. Online service providers liability, copyright infringement and freedom of expression. Could Europe learn from Canada? (Federica Giovanella). - Chapter 13. Non-financial disclosures in the tech sector: furthering the trend (Peter Micek & Deniz Duru Aydin). - Chapter 14. Should we treat Big Data as a public good? (Katarzyna Sledziewska, Renata W och). - Chapter 15. Internet intermediaries as responsible actors? Why it is time to rethink the e-Commerce Directive as well (Sophie Stalla-Bourdillon). - Chapter 16. Towards fostering compliance by design, drawing designers into the regulatory frame (Ewa Lurger). - Part IV: Commentaries. - Chapter 17. Does great power come with great responsibility? The need to talk about Corporate Political Responsibility (Dennis Broeders & Linnet Taylor). - Chapter 18. The Economic Impact of Online Intermediaries (Hosuk Lee-Makiyama and Rositsa Georgieva). - Chapter 19. Online Service Providers and ethical disclosure in sales (Jennifer Baker).
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