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ISTAS 2005: Los Angeles, CA, USA
- Weapons and Wires - Prevention and Safety in a Time of Fear: Proceedings of the 2005 International Symposium on Technology and Society, ISTAS 2005, Los Angeles, CA, USA, June 8-10, 2005. IEEE 2005, ISBN 0-7803-9284-1
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Reducing energy vulnerability. 1-8 - Richard Beckwith, Scott D. Mainwaring:
Privacy: personal information, threats, and technologies. 9-16 - Raphael Cariou:
Service robotics in area surveillance: criteria of usefulness. 17-27 - Timothy J. Farnham:
The concern for genetic diversity: raising awareness for the loss of global biological diversity. 28-32 - David M. Hassenzahl, Denise Tillery, Paulette Laidler:
Technical risk information: decision tool or rhetorical ammunition? Undisputed facts in the Yucca mountain debate. 33-36 - Bogdan Hoanca:
Freedom of silence vs. freedom of speech: technology, law and information security. 37-45 - Christopher Landauer:
People-appropriate policy models require new mathematical tools (I am not a number). 46-51 - John Laprise:
Cyberwarfare seen through a mariner's spyglass. 52-61 - M. Monahan:
The business of warfighting: ethical implications of the industry-government relationship in the development of defense technologies. 62-70 - Gene Moriarty:
The war of the worlds. 71-78 - Christine Perakslis, Robert M. Wolk:
Social acceptance of RFID as a biometric security method. 79-87 - Rae Carrington Schipke:
Ain't misbehavin': the relationship between writing and social interaction in computer-mediated group (CMG) process. 88-93 - Jeffrey M. Sullivan:
Revolution or evolution? The rise of the UAVs. 94-101 - Jeffrey M. Sullivan:
Impediments to and incentives for automation in the Air Force. 102-110 - Shinji R. Yamane, Akira Baba:
Archival perspective on the social history of computing. 111-113 - Jiang Yu:
The national champion in ICT standard competition: evidence from an emerging country. 114-120
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