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IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, Volume 35
Volume 35, Number 1, March 2016
- Greg Adamson

:
Broadening SSIT [President's Message]. 3 - Michael D. Higgins:

Crafting an Ethical Global Society [ISTAS'15 Welcome Address]. 4-7 - Emmeline Taylor

, Katina Michael:
Smart Toys that are the Stuff of Nightmares [Editorial]. 8-10 - Donna Halper:

FM Power to the People [Book Review]. 15-16 - Bodo Reinisch:

Probing the Sky [Book Review]. 17, 38 - Salvatore F. Pileggi

:
Is Big Data the New "God" on Earth? [Opinion]. 18-20 - Lior Lavy:

Bridging the Gap: How Technology Helps Food Artisans Connect with Consumers [Opinion]. 21-22 - Melissa Sobel, Jessica Gilmartin, Pooja Sankar:

Class Size and Confidence Levels Among Female STEM Students [Impact]. 23-26 - Anna Johnston:

Creepiness Is in the Eye of the Beholder [Opinion]. 27-28 - Bogdan Hoanca:

If Privacy Is Dead, What Can We Do Instead? [Commentary]. 29-37 - Michael Eldred:

Blockchain Thinking and Euphoric Hubris [Letter to the Editor]. 39 - Ramona Pringle:

Narrative, Design, and Comprehension: Connective Technologies and their Terms of Service Agreements. 40-46 - Kimberly Zeitz, Randy C. Marchany, Joseph G. Tront:

Speed isn?t Enough: Usability and Adoption of an Optimized Alert Notification System. 47-55 - Ryan Tate, Gregory J. Conti, Alexander Farmer, Edward Sobiesk:

Evaluating Adversarial Interfaces: An Automated Approach. 56-68 - Aikaterini D. Baka

, Nikolaos K. Uzunoglu:
Protecting Workers from Step Voltage Hazards. 69-74 - Sohyung Cho, Youngseok Lee, Inbae Chang:

Designing a Novel ECG Simulator: Multi-Modality Electrocardiography into a Three- Dimensional Wire Cube Network. 75-84 - Michael Victor Arnold, Christopher Pearce:

Are Technologies Innocent? : Part Two: Human Exclusivity - Only Humans Can Be Held to Moral Account [Commentary-Series]. 85-87 - Christine Perakslis:

Dagen Hogertrafik (H-Day) and Risk Habituation [Last Word]. 88
Volume 35, Number 2, June 2016
- Katina Michael:

When Uber Cars Become Driverless: "They Won't Need No Driver" [Editorial]. 5-10 - Karl D. Stephan:

Toyota: Not So Fast, Guys [Ethical Dilemmas]. 36-37 - Karl D. Stephan:

GM Ignition Switch Recall: Too Little Too Late? [Ethical Dilemmas]. 34-35 - Greg Adamson

:
Do We Just "Build Stuff"? [President's Message]. 3 - Christine Perakslis:

Militarized Zones: The Thinking Machine, the Occupying Machine, the Intensive Machine [Last Word]. 88 - Wajiya Zafar, Bilal Muhammad Khan:

Flying Ad-Hoc Networks: Technological and Social Implications. 67-74 - Jeff Robbins:

When Smart Is Not: Technology and Michio Kaku's The Future of the Mind [Leading Edge]. 29-31 - Nicholas Paul Sheppard:

Social Network Neutrality, Anyone? [Commentary]. 28-45 - Michael Victor Arnold, Christopher Pearce:

Are Technologies Innocent?: Part Three: The Passive Instrument Argument [Commentary]. 86-87 - Tom Fournier:

Will My Next Car Be a Libertarian or a Utilitarian?: Who Will Decide? 40-45 - A. David Wunsch:

America's Assembly Line [Book Reviews]. 15-17 - David Brin:

Marvin Minsky: 1927-2016 [In Memoriam]. 11 - Chris MacDonald:

Uber Is Built on Trust [Ethics Opinion]. 38-39 - Kathleen Richardson

:
Sex Robot Matters: Slavery, the Prostituted, and the Rights of Machines. 46-53 - Sharon Bradley-Munn:

RFID Implant Developments: Where Are We Headed and Why? [Commentary]. 32-33 - Stephanie Winkler, Sherali Zeadally:

Privacy Policy Analysis of Popular Web Platforms. 75-85 - Erik L. Stayton:

Rise of the Robots [Book Reviews]. 18-20 - Tim McFarland

:
Military Robots: Mapping the Moral Landscape [Book Reviews]. 23-25 - Andreea Peca:

Robot Enhanced Therapy for Children with Autism Disorders: Measuring Ethical Acceptability. 54-66 - Karl D. Stephan:

The Cybernetics Movement [Book Reviews]. 20-22 - Donna L. Halper:

Digital Militarism [Book Reviews]. 25-27 - Doug Preis:

Perfecting Sound [Book Reviews]. 12-14
Volume 35, Number 3, September 2016
- Greg Adamson

:
Is Ethics an Emerging Property? [President's Message]. 5 - Katina Michael:

Can Good Standards Propel Unethical Technologies? [Editorial]. 6-9 - Loren Graham:

How Not to Network a Nation [Book Review]. 11 - Vladimir Radunovic:

Internet Governance, Security, Privacy and the Ethical Dimension of ICTs in 2030 [Leading Edge]. 12-14 - Michael G. Michael:

The Paradox of the Uberveillance Equation [Commentary]. 14-20 - Janet Cox Achora:

ICTs and Small Holder Farming [Opinion]. 21-22 - Miriam Cunningham:

Technology-Enhanced Learning in Kenya Universities: Influences on Wider Adoption and Take Up. 28-35 - Andy Dearden, William D. Tucker:

Moving ICTD Research Beyond Bungee Jumping: Practical Case Studies and Recommendations. 36-43 - Pascale-L. Blyth

, Milos N. Mladenovic
, Bonnie A. Nardi, Hamid R. Ekbia, Norman Makoto Su:
Expanding the Design Horizon for Self-Driving Vehicles: Distributing Benefits and Burdens. 44-49 - Marc Cannellos

:
Lost in Translation: Getting Autonomous Weapons Systems Ethicists, Regulators, and Technologists to Speak the Same Language. 50-58 - Peter M. Corcoran, Claudia Costache:

Smartphones, Biometrics, and a Brave New World. 59-66 - Danielle van Greunen

:
Ethics, Children, and Biometric Technology. 67-72 - Philip A. Catherwood, Dewar D. Finlay

, James A. D. McLaughlin
:
Intelligent Subcutaneous Body Area Networks: Anticipating Implantable Devices. 73-80 - Jan Kallberg

:
Humanitarian Cyber Operations: Rapid Response to Crimes against Humanity Utilizing Offensive Cyber Ability. 81-85 - Michael Victor Arnold, Christopher Pearce:

Are Technologies Innocent?: Part Four: The "Dumb Instrument" Argument [Commentary]. 86-87 - Christine Perakslis:

An Ounce of Steel: Crucial Alignments [Last Word]. 88
Volume 35, Number 4, December 2016
- Greg Adamson

:
Listening to Our Technologies [President's Message]. 5 - Katina Michael:

Gone Fishing: Breaking with the Biometric Rhythm of Tech-Centricism [Editorial]. 6-9 - A. David Wunsch:

Reclaiming Conversation [Book Reviews]. 10-49 - Kimberly Young:

Help for Cybersex Addicts and Their Loved Ones [Commentary]. 13-15 - Ramona Pringle, Katina Michael, Michael G. Michael:

Unintended Consequences of Living with AI: The Paradox of Technological Potential?Part II [Guest Editorial]. 17-21 - John C. Havens:

Updating a Declaration [Commentary]. 22-26 - Laura Cechanowicz

, Brian Cantrell, Alex McDowell:
World Building and the Future of Media: A Case Study-Makoko 2036. 28-38 - Johanna Blakley:

Technologies of Taste. 39-43 - Rebecca Ricks:

Mediating the Body: Wearable Tech and Disembodied Reality [Opinion]. 44-45 - Imogen R. Coe

, Alexander Ferworn
:
The Life and Contributions of Countess Ada Lovelace: Unintended Consequences of Exclusion, Prejudice, and Stereotyping. 46-49 - Isabel Pedersen

:
Home Is Where the AI Heart Is [Commentary]. 50-51 - Ramona Pringle:

Love, Philosophy, and Processors: Interview with a Robot [Interview]. 52-55 - Christopher DiCarlo

:
How to Avoid a Robotic Apocalypse: A Consideration on the Future Developments of AI, Emergent Consciousness, and the Frankenstein Effect. 56-61 - Joe Carvalko:

Crossing the Evolutionary Gap [Fiction]. 62-67 - Arisa Ema, Naonori Akiya, Hirotaka Osawa, Hiromitsu Hattori, Shinya Oie, Ryutaro Ichise, Nobutsugu Kanzaki, Minao Kukita, Reina Saijo, Takushi Otani, Naoki Miyano, Yoshimi Yashiro

:
Future Relations between Humans and Artificial Intelligence: A Stakeholder Opinion Survey in Japan. 68-75 - David M. Cummings:

Embedded Software Under the Courtroom Microscope: A Case Study of the Toyota Unintended Acceleration Trial. 76-84 - Michael Victor Arnold, Christopher Pearce:

Are Technologies Innocent?: Part Five: The \"Free Will\" Argument [Commentary]. 86-87 - Christine Perakslis:

Half-Life: Decay, Discernment and Human Agency [Last Word]. 88

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