Ethics of Cyber Conflict
In the age of
the so-called information revolution, the ability to control, disrupt or
manipulate the enemy’s information infrastructure has become as decisive as
weapon superiority with respect to determining the outcome of conflicts. So
much so that Pentagon’s definition of cyberspace as a new domain in which war
is waged, alongside land, sea, air and space, comes as no surprise.
The
deployment of cyber conflicts as part of a state’s defensive or offensive
strategy is a fast growing phenomenon, which is rapidly changing the dynamics
of combat as well as the role that warfare plays in political negotiations and
the life of civil societies. Such changes are not the exclusive concern of the
military, for they also have a bearing on ethicists and policymakers, since
existing ethical theories of war, together with national and international
regulations, struggle to address the novelties of this phenomenon.
The issue
could not be more pressing and there is a much felt and fast escalating need to
share information and coordinate ethical theorising about cyber conflicts.
Contributions to the workshop will address issues concerning the way ICTs are
affecting our ethical views of conflicts and warfare, as well as the analysis
of just-war principles in the light of the dissemination of cyber conflicts;
humanitarian military interventions based on ICTs; whether preventive acts of
cyber war may satisfy jus-ad-bellum criteria; challenges of upholding
jus-in-bello standards in cyber warfare, especially in asymmetric conflicts;
attribution and proportionality of the response to cyber attacks; moral
permissibility of automated responses and ethical deployment of military
robotic weapons.
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