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In 2015, the US Senate passed a resolution recommending the adoption of a national strategy for IoT development (IoT Resolution).1 Currently, the proposed Developing Innovation and Growing the Internet of Things Act (DIGIT) would establish a federal working group and a steering committee within the Department of Commerce.2 If the act is adopted, the working group, under the guidance of the steering committee, would be charged with evaluating and providing a report containing recommendations to Congress on multiple IoT aspects.3 These areas include identifying federal statutes and regulations that could inhibit IoT growth and impact consumer privacy and security.4
An increasingly common view among political philosophers is that, in fact, all justified humanitarian intervention is obligatory. There is no such thing as merely permissible: either there is a duty to intervene, or there is a duty not to intervene. This chapter considers the possibility those humanitarian interventions, which are permissible but discretionary for citizens, are always either obligatory or prohibited for their government, depending on the circumstances. Severe deprivations and human-rights abuses are a permanent feature of the world in which we live. There is a second feature of positive duties that makes the all-or-nothing view untenable as a description of the moral requirements of citizens. Namely, all positive duties are subject to a high-cost qualification. The all-or-nothing view, if taken as an account of the moral requirements of citizens, looks to be untenable.
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