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Journal ArticleDOI

Delete: The virtue of forgetting in the digital age

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TLDR
Mayer-Schonberger as discussed by the authors is the director of the Information and Informatics Institute at Princeton University, New Jersey, US$24.95 (hardback), ISBN 978•0•691•13861•9
Abstract
by Viktor Mayer‐Schonberger, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2009, 237 pp., US$24.95 (hardback), ISBN 978‐0‐691‐13861‐9 Viktor Mayer‐Schonberger is the director of the Information and In...

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Citations
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Forget Me Do: Empowering user privacy on social network sites

Ben Smyth
TL;DR: This work responds to the risks associated with information revelations by proposing deleting information that can be used to an individual’s disadvantage, thereby freeing individuals from the consequences of information revelations.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Fostering the Culture of Cyber Security

TL;DR: An innovative Cyber Range to be integrated in the foreseen European Cyber Range Network is introduced and a platform devoted to easily create virtual environments devoted to cyberwarfare training and cybertechnology development is described.
Dissertation

After You Press "Share": Supporting Identity Management and Identity Reflection through Social Media.

Xuan Zhao
TL;DR: This chapter discussespacking management work in the context of social media ecology and investigates Goffman’s Dramaturgical Approach to Unpacking Management.

Preservation and Forgetting: Friends or Foes?

TL;DR: This work aims at studying how a managed or controlled form of forgetting can play a role in digital preservation, including personal and organizational archives as well as collective memories.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Privacy and human behavior in the age of information

TL;DR: This Review summarizes and draws connections between diverse streams of empirical research on privacy behavior: people’s uncertainty about the consequences of privacy-related behaviors and their own preferences over those consequences; the context-dependence of people's concern about privacy; and the degree to which privacy concerns are malleable—manipulable by commercial and governmental interests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extended Self in a Digital World

TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual update of the extended self was proposed to revitalize the concept, incorporate the impacts of digitization, and provide an understanding of consumer sense of self in today's technological environment.
Proceedings Article

4chan and /b/: An Analysis of Anonymity and Ephemerality in a Large Online Community

TL;DR: Two studies of online ephemerality and anonymity based on the popular discussion board /b/ at 4chan.org are presented, finding that over 90% of posts are made by fully anonymous users, with other identity signals adopted and discarded at will.
Book

The Digital Scholar. How Technology is Transforming Scholarly Practice

Martin Weller
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the implications of new technologies on higher education, the possibilities for new forms of scholarly practice and what lessons can be drawn from other sectors, such as music, newspapers, film and publishing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forgetting personal data and revoking consent under the GDPR: Challenges and proposed solutions

TL;DR: This work reviews all controversies around the new stringent definitions of consent revocation and the right to be forgotten and argues that such enforcement is indeed feasible provided that implementation guidelines and low-level business specifications are put in place in a clear and cross-platform manner in order to cater for all possible exceptions and complexities.