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October 6, 2011
For years, Mike Hubbell, an engineer more comfortable with chemical equations than sentence composition, devoted fall Saturdays to his alma mater’s football team. He shared that passion with most Penn State University graduates. He paid for the expanded cable package to watch every game from his home in Texas. And when a resurgent 2005 season led the Nittany Lions to their first conference championship in more than a decade, Hubbell read all the latest developments on the websites of newspapers…

Too Much Information: The Blurring of Private and Public Life Online

October 17, 2011
I remember the day I first logged on to the Internet. It was the early 1990s. I had a desktop Windows PC, and one of those never-ending America Online [now AOL] promo discs that we all received in the mail. Sitting at an old wooden typewriter desk, I was about to upload and pay for the service and send my first email. There I was, no longer isolated in my apartment, but now connected to the world.  The excitement, the thrill of that moment, to suddenly feel expansive, global, a part of…

The Ethics of Book Pirating

October 25, 2011
The ethical and legal issues surrounding the illegal downloading of music and film have been exhaustively played out in the media, court and public opinion.  And yet, people continue to pirate media. An often overlooked area of media piracy—at least in comparison to that of music, film and television—is the pirating of books.  The rise of “ebooks” – digital versions of publications that can be read on computers or special electronic devices - has made book piracy much more viable. However,…

The Ethics of LinkedIn Invitations

November 17, 2011
If an employer is seriously considering hiring you, its human resources department (HR) will probably conduct an Internet search and explore your social media posts to learn more about you. Now, HR trolls social media to find potential job candidates without having to post or advertise an opening.

Social Networking Sites Taking Action

November 28, 2011
Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, told Congress last year that “There’s concern that Facebook and other social networks manipulate privacy policies and settings to confuse users, extract more personal information from them, and transfer the information to application developers and websites.”

‘Twitter terrorists’ and legislating misinformation on social networks

December 20, 2011
It started as an apparent attempt to help. On Aug. 25, just before noon, a message went out on Twitter that five children had been kidnapped from an elementary school by an armed group in Boca del Rio, a municipality not far from Veracruz, a port city along Mexico’s eastern coast that has seen an increase in drug-related violence over the last year.