RT Book T1 Monitoring laws: profiling and identity in the world state A1 Goldenfein, Jake LA English PP Cambridge New York, NY Port Melbourne, VIC New Delhi Singapore PB Cambridge University Press YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1685921965 AB Our world, and the objects and people within it, are increasingly interpreted and classified by automated systems. At the same time, those automated systems and their classifications influence what happens in the physical world. In this cyber-physical world or 'world state', people are asking what law's role should be in regulating these systems. In Monitoring Laws, Jake Goldenfein traces the history of government profiling, from the invention of photography to create criminal registers, through the emerging deployments of computer vision for personality, emotion, and behavioral analysis. He asks what elements and applications of profiling have provoked legal intervention in the past, and demonstrates exactly what is different about contemporary profiling that requires a new legal treatments. This work should be read by anyone interested in how computation is changing society and governance, and what the law can do to better protect us from these changes now. CN 342.0858 SN 9781108637657 K1 Electronic Surveillance : Law and legislation K1 Government information : Law and legislation K1 Behavioral assessment K1 Rule of law K1 Biometric identification : Government policy K1 Criminal behavior, Prediction of K1 Electronic Surveillance : Government policy K1 Law Enforcement : Government policy K1 Civil Rights K1 Privacy, Right of K1 Electronic surveillance ; Law and legislation K1 Government information ; Law and legislation K1 Biometric identification ; Government policy K1 Electronic surveillance ; Government policy K1 Law enforcement ; Government policy K1 Bindung an Gesetz und Recht : Rechtsstaatsprinzip : Fernüberwachung : Elektronische Überwachung K1 eBook-Cambridge-Gesamt-EBA-2024 DO 10.1017/9781108637657