Volume 6, Issue 1
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Coding and encoding rights in internet infrastructure
Stefania Milan, University of Amsterdam
Niels ten Oever, Article 19 & University of Amsterdam
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Fostering a cyber security mindset
William H. Dutton, Michigan State University
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Public artworks and the freedom of panorama controversy: a case of Wikimedia influence
Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay, French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Pierre-Carl Langlais, Université Paris Sorbonne
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Australian internet policy
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EDITORIAL: Australian internet policy
Angela Daly, Queensland University of Technology
Julian Thomas, RMIT University
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The passage of Australia’s data retention regime: national security, human rights, and media scrutiny
Nicolas P. Suzor, Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
Kylie Pappalardo, Queensland University of Technology
Natalie McIntosh, Queensland University of Technology
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Computer network operations and ‘rule-with-law’ in Australia
Adam Molnar, University of Waterloo
Christopher Parsons, University of Toronto
Erik Zouave, KU Leuven
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Internet accessibility and disability policy: lessons for digital inclusion and equality from Australia
Gerard Goggin, University of Sydney
Scott Hollier, Media Access Australia
Wayne Hawkins, Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (ACCAN)
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Internet policy and Australia’s Northern Territory Intervention
Ellie Rennie, RMIT University
Jake Goldenfein, The University of Melbourne
Julian Thomas, RMIT University
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Towards responsive regulation of the Internet of Things: Australian perspectives
Megan Richardson, The University of Melbourne
Rachelle Bosua, The University of Melbourne
Karin Clark, The University of Melbourne
Jeb Webb, The University of Melbourne
Atif Ahmad, The University of Melbourne
Sean Maynard, The University of Melbourne
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Volume 6, Issue 3
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The Israeli Digital Rights Movement's campaign for privacy
Efrat Daskal, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Accountability challenges confronting cyberspace governance
Jacqueline Eggenschwiler, University of Oxford
Volume 6, Issue 4
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Gaps and bumps in the political history of the internet
Félix Tréguer, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
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Contested meanings of inclusiveness, accountability and transparency in trade policymaking
Jeremy Malcolm, Electronic Frontier Foundation
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Political micro-targeting
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EDITORIAL: Political micro-targeting: a Manchurian candidate or just a dark horse?
Balázs Bodó, University of Amsterdam
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
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The role of digital marketing in political campaigns
Jeff Chester, Center for Digital Democracy
Kathryn C. Montgomery, American University
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WhatsApp in Brazil: mobilising voters through door-to-door and personal messages
Mauricio Moura, The George Washington University
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College
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Two crates of beer and 40 pizzas: the adoption of innovative political behavioural targeting techniques
Tom Dobber, University of Amsterdam
Damian Trilling, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
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Restrictions on data-driven political micro-targeting in Germany
Simon Kruschinski, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
André Haller, University of Bamberg
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On democracy
Sophie in 't Veld, European Parliament
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Micro-targeting, the quantified persuasion
Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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