Contributors from computer and information sciences, of course, but also from fields such as psychology and law, review the current approaches, developments, practical examples, and case studies in cyber-crime and in its counterpart, personal and global privacy. Among their topics are listening to children's experiences of online violence, privacy compliance requirements in workflow environments, the automatic detection of cyberbullying to make the internet a safer environment, the role of automated affective content screening in regulating digital media and reducing risk of trauma, and analyzing cybercrime with spatial econometrics in European Union countries.
– ProtoView Book Abstracts (formerly Book News, Inc.)