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  • × author_ss:"Floridi, L."
  1. Floridi, L.: ¬Die 4. Revolution : wie die Infosphäre unser Leben verändert (2015) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Unsere Computer werden immer schneller, kleiner und billiger; wir produzieren jeden Tag genug Daten, um alle Bibliotheken der USA damit zu füllen; und im Durchschnitt trägt jeder Mensch heute mindestens einen Gegenstand bei sich, der mit dem Internet verbunden ist. Wir erleben gerade eine explosionsartige Entwicklung von Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien. Luciano Floridi, einer der weltweit führenden Informationstheoretiker, zeigt in seinem meisterhaften Buch, dass wir uns nach den Revolutionen der Physik (Kopernikus), Biologie (Darwin) und Psychologie (Freud) nun inmitten einer vierten Revolution befinden, die unser ganzes Leben verändert. Die Trennung zwischen online und offline schwindet, denn wir interagieren zunehmend mit smarten, responsiven Objekten, um unseren Alltag zu bewältigen oder miteinander zu kommunizieren. Der Mensch kreiert sich eine neue Umwelt, eine »Infosphäre«. Persönlichkeitsprofile, die wir online erzeugen, beginnen, in unseren Alltag zurückzuwirken, sodass wir immer mehr ein »Onlife« leben. Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien bestimmen die Art, wie wir einkaufen, arbeiten, für unsere Gesundheit vorsorgen, Beziehungen pflegen, unsere Freizeit gestalten, Politik betreiben und sogar, wie wir Krieg führen. Aber sind diese Entwicklungen wirklich zu unserem Vorteil? Was sind ihre Risiken? Floridi weist den Weg zu einem neuen ethischen und ökologischen Denken, um die Herausforderungen der digitalen Revolution und der Informationsgesellschaft zu meistern. Ein Buch von großer Aktualität und theoretischer Brillanz.
    BK
    54.08 Informatik in Beziehung zu Mensch und Gesellschaft
    Classification
    54.08 Informatik in Beziehung zu Mensch und Gesellschaft
    LCSH
    Internet / Social aspects
    RSWK
    Digitale Revolution / Informationsgesellschaft / Internet / Kritik
    Internet / Informationsgesellschaft / Kritik
    Subject
    Digitale Revolution / Informationsgesellschaft / Internet / Kritik
    Internet / Informationsgesellschaft / Kritik
    Internet / Social aspects
  2. Floridi, L.: Brave.Net.World : the Internet as a disinformation superhighway? (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Considers the possibility that the Internet could become a powerful tool for the dissemination of disinformation and looks at ways in which disinformation engendered by the Internet might differ from other forms of disinformation engendered via paper and broadcasting media. Discusses ways by which such disinformation, disseminated by the Internet, could be couuntered and neutralized
    Theme
    Internet
  3. Floridi, L.: ¬The Internet: which future for organised knowledge : Frankenstein or Pygmalion? (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Based on a paper presented at the UNESCO Philosophy Forum International Conference, Paris, 14-17 March 1995. Presents the basic ideas underlying the provision of information services on the Internet: digital discrimination; disappearance of the great compilers; emergence of the computerized scholar; stored knowledge on the Internet becoming greater than that which can be accessed; accessible knowledge becoming greater than that which can be managed; digital parricide; the need to increase access to the Internet to avoid the rise of a new technological elite; emergence of a new language of the encyclopedia; pollution of the intellectual space on the Internet; and the issue of decentralization versus fragmentation
    Theme
    Internet
  4. Floridi, L.: Internet: which future for organized knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion? (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The Internet is like a new country, with a growing population of millions of well educated citizens. It it wants to keep track of its own cultural achievements in real time, it will have to provide itself with an infostructure like a virtual National Library system. Proposes that institutions all over the world should take full advantage of the new technologies available, and promote and coordinate such a global service. This is essential in order to make possible a really efficient management of human knowledge on a global scale
    Theme
    Internet
  5. Floridi, L.: Philosophy and computing : an introduction (1999) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Philosophy and Computing explores each of the following areas of technology: the digital revolution; the computer; the Internet and the Web; CD-ROMs and Mulitmedia; databases, textbases, and hypertexts; Artificial Intelligence; the future of computing. Luciano Floridi shows us how the relationship between philosophy and computing provokes a wide range of philosophical questions: is there a philosophy of information? What can be achieved by a classic computer? How can we define complexity? What are the limits of quantam computers? Is the Internet an intellectual space or a polluted environment? What is the paradox in the Strong Artificial Intlligence program? Philosophy and Computing is essential reading for anyone wishing to fully understand both the development and history of information and communication technology as well as the philosophical issues it ultimately raises. 'The most careful and scholarly book to be written on castles in a generation.'