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The Right to Digital Self-Defense

IEEE Security and Privacy, 2017
Although the right to physical self-defense is legally well established, it’s unclear how this principle translates to security in today’s digital world. Approaches to cyber self-defense are discussed, as are arguments for and against allowing organizations to actively respond to cyberattacks.
Bryan Reinicke   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Is there a “right” to self‐defense?

Criminal Justice Ethics, 2004
The use of defensive force, even deadly force, in protection of self or others (hereinafter "self-defense") is a paradigm of moral and legal permissibility. However, just why this is so has turned out to be quite a puzzle; indeed, there is today hardly the slightest consensus on the moral justification for this permission to use force, or even on what ...
Whitley Kaufman
exaly   +2 more sources

The Right of National Defense

International Studies Perspectives, 2007
This article argues that there are two justifications of the right of national defense. First, some states possess the right as a means of protecting legitimate domestic political institutions. Second, all states possess the right within a morally defensible form of international law.
exaly   +2 more sources

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