Contents: Introduction. Part I Identity, Security and Privacy in Context: Designing for trust, L. Jean Camp; The digital persona and its application to data surveillance, Roger Clarke; Privacy, visibility, transparency, and exposure, Julie E. Cohen; Exploring identity and identification in cyberspace, Oscar H. Gandy, Jr; A contextual approach to privacy online, Helen Nissenbaum. Part II Surveillance, Security and Anonymity: Hacking the Panopticon: distributed online surveillance and resistance, BenoA (R)t Dupont; The surveillant assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson; 'Sousveillance': inverse surveillance in multimedia imaging, Steve Mann; Surveillance as cultural practice, Torin Monahan; Surveillance and security: a dodgy relationship, Walter Peissl; Counter-surveillance as political intervention?, Torin Monahan; Resistance against cyber-surveillance within social movements and how surveillance adapts, Oliver Leistert; Privacy, surveillance, and law, Richard A. Posner; Squaring the circle of smart surveillance and privacy, Joseph A. Cannataci. Part III Privacy, Data Protection and Security: Data protection pursuant to the right to privacy in human rights treaties, Lee A. Bygrave; Consumer culture and the commodification of policing and security, Ian Loader; Information technology and dataveillance, Roger A. Clarke; Public assessment of new surveillance-oriented security technologies: beyond the trade-off between privacy and security, Vincenzo Pavone and Sara Degli Esposti; European protectionism in cloud computing: addressing concerns over the PATRIOT Act, John T. Billings; Internet intermediaries, cloud computing and geospatial data: how competition and privacy converge in the mobile environment, Lisa Madelon Campbell; Stolen identities, Jennifer Whitson and Kevin D. Haggerty. Part IV Smart Technologies, Social Control and Human Rights: The body as data? Biobank regulation via the 'back door' of data protection law, Lee A. Bygrave; CCTV policy in th