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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Informationssäkerhetsrisker inom Software as a Service användaravtal : Kategoriserar slutanvändares förståelse för användaravtal och dess informationssäkerhetsrisker.

Lindgren, Linnea, Jansson, Linn January 2020 (has links)
Denna uppsats har undersökt användaravtal inom Software as a Service tjänster. Målet var att skapa en bild om användares förståelse och riskmedvetenhet av användaravtal samt leverantörers skyldigheter ur en användarsynpunkt.   I arbetet gjordes en pilotstudie där fyra SaaS tjänsters användaravtal undersöktes för att skapa en verklighetsbild om hur användaravtal utformas. Därefter utfördes intervjuer med åtta respondenter som valts efter vilken IT-bakgrund de har. Det gjordes för att få information om användares kunskapsbas, reflektioner och ställningstagande.  Studien kom fram till att användare sällan läser igenom avtal där den främsta anledningen är tidsåtagandet och den språkliga komplexiteten. Respondenter anser att det är viktigt att läsa igenom avtal och anser att användare bör läsa igenom avtal oftare för att upprätthålla förståelsen.   Det framkom ett missnöje med överdelande av användares data som kan leda till brist på kontroll med datahantering. Respondenter har låg kunskap om vilka lagstiftningar som reglerar användande av Cloudtjänster.
2

Tankar om övervakning : En digital etnografisk studie om anonymitets- och integritetsfrågor på Flashback Forum

Olovsson, Ebba, Wixner, Rebecca January 2022 (has links)
This essay is a digital empirical observation study which aims to examine current power dynamics considering online freedom and privacy at the Swedish social online forum Flashback Forum. The study centers on how users on Flashback forum interpret and express their views on anonymity, privacy and digital freedom and how their views stand in correlation to Manuel Castells’ network theory as well as Michel Foucault’s Panopticon. The scientific background of this essay is rooted in an information scientific approach and examines how digital technologies have profoundly changed how we as a society interpret privacy and information freedom. The empirical data which this study relies on has been gathered from the website Flashback Forum, a forum renowned for its controversial reputation and its focus on anonymity and freedom of expression. The digital era has broken down boundaries and created contradictory social relations which compromise individuals’ sense of identity. It is our intention to examine these contradictory relations and see how they interact with the average Flashback user’s sense of self. Our results have confirmed what similar studies have already proven, namely, that technology has indeed changed how we approach privacy and information freedom. However, what sets this study apart is that we further reconceptualise what integrity and identity means today from an information scientific point of view and take a closer look at underlying power structures that influence our worldview. The constant flows of information redefine social practices and have given cause to re-examine legal guidelines to better protect individuals and their digital and information rights.
3

Twitter, Tumblr, troll och porr : Om sociala mediers ansvar för yttrande- och informationsfrihet / Twitter, Tumblr, trolls and porn : On social media and the responsibility for freedom of speech and freedom of information

Thorslund, Fredrik Emanuel January 2019 (has links)
There has, for the past few decades, been an increasing tendency from states to hold social media and other information intermediaries liable for the illicit or undesirable speech of their users. Much less debated, however, has been the question of intermediary responsibility for the freedom of speech and information of internet users. In the EU, as well as the US, there are no clear legal safeguards for protecting freedom of speech on privately owned networking platforms – albeit the exponential growth of these platforms as spheres for public expression and discourse. This thesis argues that the content moderation practices and policies of some of the largest social media platforms, in several respects, correspond poorly to Swedish and European freedom of speech standards, as established in human rights law. Considering the rationale behind speech rights, as well as the increasing significance of social media for public discourse, the thesis suggests alternative legal measures to establish corporate responsibility and ensuring online freedom of speech.

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