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Intermediate Moral Concepts: Privacy, Property, and Informed Consent

Jeopardy. Intermediate Moral Concepts: Privacy, Property, and Informed Consent. Privacy. Property. Informed Consent. Toysmart. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. Row 1, Col 1.

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Intermediate Moral Concepts: Privacy, Property, and Informed Consent

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  1. Jeopardy Intermediate Moral Concepts: Privacy, Property, and Informed Consent

  2. Privacy Property Informed Consent Toysmart 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500

  3. Row 1, Col 1 What is one of many definitions of privacy? The right to be left alone

  4. 1,2 What is the labor theory of property? When we mix our labor with an object it becomes ours.

  5. 1,3 What is informed consent in the context of this course? Your consenting to continue on in ADEM 4016 after studying the syllabus in the first class and understanding the nature of the quid pro quo of it proposes.

  6. 1,4 What is the analogy between building a statute to the village chief and never transferring Toysmart customer PII to third parties? Both involve promises and the dead.

  7. 2,1 What is privacy as a (moral) right? Under this model, privacy is justified as essential to autonomy.

  8. 2,2 What is the “bundle theory of property”? According to this theory, property is actually a bundle of associated rights like to possess, control, use, benefit from, dispose of, and exclude others from a physical or intellectual object. The range of the property right depends on the size of the bundle.

  9. 2,3 What is informed consent according to the Belmont Report? “Subjects to the degree that they are capable [should] be given the opportunity to choose what shall or shall not happen to then.”

  10. 2,4 What is part of the settlement between the FTC and Toysmart? Toysmart creditors “can sell electronic assets only if the purchasing company abided by the same privacy policy.”

  11. 3,1 What is the triangle or relational theory of privacy? Information is public when directly relevant to the relation between those who have it and those who want it.

  12. 3,2 What is intellectual property? This form of property is both non-rivalrous and non-exclusive according to T. Jefferson.

  13. 3,3 What is informed consent in relation to risk and safety? Consent of risk taker to the nature and breadth of the risk he or she is being exposed to. If this risk information is being covered up, this triggers the obligaton to blow the whistle.

  14. 3,4 What are three TRUSTe guidelines for PII transfer? Mandated third party oversight, consumer notice and choice, and privacy policies must be honored.

  15. 4,1 What is Informational Privacy? This kind of privacy is about who has control over information that is about you.

  16. 4,2 What do we mean when we say that intellectual property is non-rivalrous? My having an idea does not prevent you from enjoying the same idea at the same time.

  17. 4,3 What are the three conditions for informed consent as spelled out by the Belmont Report? Information, comprehension, and voluntariness

  18. 4,4 What was the “start up” offer made by Disney to Toysmart? 20 million dollars along with 25 million dollars worth of access to advertising infrastructure.

  19. 5,1 What is Privacy as a Private Good? This characterization of privacy has been overruled by security as a public good in the Patriot Act.

  20. 5,2 What do we mean when we say that intellectual property is non-excludable? Like the air, intellectual property expands and cannot be contained once it is “let out.”

  21. 5,3 What are “opt-in” and “opt-out”? These are active and passive forms of informed consent to the online transfer of PII and TGI to third parties (Toysmart case).

  22. 5,4 What are Toysmartcreditors (and stakeholders)? Pan Communications and Blackstone Software are among these in the Toysmart Case.

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