Introduction, presentation of the EU, course objectives From the philosophy of science and technology to digital ethics: history, concepts, paths From the specificity of digital artefacts: diversity, neutrality, agentivity, sociality, uses Links between science, technology and society: sociology of controversies, actor-network theory, governance, responsible innovation, social acceptability, technology assessment Digital ethics: transhumanism, privacy, Big Data, algorithmic governmentality, Towards digital ethics: Value Sensitive Design, Ethics in Design; hacker ethics History of surveillance and social control, emergence of the 'risk society' (Beck) and security policies Theories of surveillance and theories of security: Foucault, Bauman, Lyon, Marx, Bigo, Balibar; Ethical issues of surveillance and security: privacy, big date, profiling Presentation of ethically sensitive digital technologies, such as biometrics, facial recognition of emotions, smart cameras, RFID chips; analysis, discussion and debate on the ethical issues Practical workshops on ethics in intervention