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Hacking Digital Ethics
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23 April 2021

This book is not a critique of digital ethics but rather a hack. It follows the method of hacking by developing an exploit kit on the basis of state-of-the-art social theory, which it uses to breach the insecure legacy system upon which the discourse of digital ethics is running. This legacy system is made up of four interdependent components: the philosophical mythology of humanism, social science critique, media scandalization, and the activities of many civil society organisations lobbying for various forms of regulation. The hack exposes the bugs, the sloppy programming, and the false promises of current digital ethics, and, because it is an ethical hack, redesigns digital ethics so that it can address the problems of the global network society. The main idea of the book is that the social world of meaning is based on information, which, because of its relational nature, must be understood more as a common good than as private property. A digital ethics that relies upon humanistic individualism cannot address the issues arising from the global network society based upon information. This demands a complete revision of the philosophical foundations of current digital ethics by means of a redesign of ethics as a theory of governance by design.
PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Ethics and moral philosophy, PHILOSOPHY / Political, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Globalization, Social and political philosophy, Globalization
“David J. Krieger and Andréa Belliger, quite literally, ‘hack’ ethics in the digital age: Rather than asking what digital ethics should look like, they pose the question of what and how ethics can be. Their answer to that question is surprising: Positing that digital ethics in its current form is little more than ‘an attempt to reassert the values, norms and regulatory regimes of Western industrial society’, the authors propose the adoption of a posthuman view of social order, and a digital ethics governed by the rules of successful networks: connectivity, flow, communication, participation, transparency, authenticity, and flexibility.” —Barbara Prainsack, Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria
Series Editors’ Introduction; Introduction: Ethical Hacking and Hacking Ethics; Chapter One The Exploit; Chapter Two The Breach; Chapter Three The Redesign; Bibliography; Index.