2005
DOI: 10.1007/s10676-005-4407-4
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Privacy. An Intercultural Perspective

Abstract: This paper deals with intercultural aspects of privacy, particularly with regard to differences between Japanese and Western conceptions. It starts with a reconstruction of the genealogy of Western subjectivity and human dignity as the basic assumptions underlying Western views on privacy. An analysis of the Western concept of informational privacy is presented. The Japanese topic of ''denial of self'' (Musi) as well as the concepts of Seken, Shakai and Ikai (as analyzed by the authors of the companion piece o… Show more

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Cited by 106 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…And cautionary tales taught developers that privacy violations might result in lawsuits. Largely missing were more stringent European perspectives on data protection (Jones 2016), or even non-western views more focused on communal norms than individual liberties (Capurro 2005). Some of the very American nature of our data is likely explained by the fact that we analyzed English-language forums (though each forum involved many international participants).…”
Section: Discussion: Work Practices Matter To Ethical Deliberationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…And cautionary tales taught developers that privacy violations might result in lawsuits. Largely missing were more stringent European perspectives on data protection (Jones 2016), or even non-western views more focused on communal norms than individual liberties (Capurro 2005). Some of the very American nature of our data is likely explained by the fact that we analyzed English-language forums (though each forum involved many international participants).…”
Section: Discussion: Work Practices Matter To Ethical Deliberationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…For example, Kaptein (2004) finds that multinational companies' (MNC) codes of conduct encompass transparency, honesty and fairness at frequencies of 55, 50, and 45%, respectively. Similarly, Capurro (2005) maintains that transparency, as opposed to privacy, is the new ethical issue of the twenty-first century.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, almost 80% do not have any information in part of the upcoming changes in the change of occupations, namely: I don't know the list of occupations, whose function will be fully automated. In generalized studies of S. V. Veretekhina [33,34,35] presented "..most of the control functions is transmitted to the automated systems, robots and machines. …the table containing the list of names of professions model automated control systems of objects and the list of names of professions replaced by automated systems in the management of documents.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%