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IS/IT Ethics. Jenny Cauble Scotty Sykes Ashley Cox. Ethics Today. Comparison of ethics in other professions to ethics in IT IT is a relatively new field Ethical situations in the present. Independent Objective Honest Impartial Fair Integrity. Understanding Trustworthy Morals/Values
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IS/IT Ethics Jenny Cauble Scotty Sykes Ashley Cox
Ethics Today • Comparison of ethics in other professions to ethics in IT • IT is a relatively new field • Ethical situations in the present
Independent Objective Honest Impartial Fair Integrity Understanding Trustworthy Morals/Values Respect Responsibility Citizenship Ethics Defined Ethics= A rational process founded on certain principles
IT Ethics Defined • Cyberethics (IT/IS Ethics)= “The study of moral, legal, and ethical issues involving the use of information and communication technologies.” • IT personnel have access to confidential information- this power can be abused Bilal Azmat: “Cyberethics (Information System Ethics)”
Why are ethics important in IT? Issues to Overcome: • Privacy • Accuracy • Property • Accessibility Bilal Azmat: “Cyberethics (Information System Ethics)”
ISACA Code of Conduct • 6 Main Ethical Standards • Organizations are not required to be members of ISACA ISACA Code of Professional Ethics
Due Professional Care • “Level of diligence that a prudent and competent expert would exercise under a given set of circumstances.” • Requires an IT auditor to exercise the same level of skill that would be expected from other practitioners of this specialty ISACA: G7 Due Professional Care
Due Professional Care (Cont.) Foundation for Due Professional Care: • Peer Review • Technical Competence • Auditor Conduct • Judgment • Business Knowledge • Certification • Standards ISACA: G7 Due Professional Care
Ethical Scenarios • 1) You are the entire information technology department for a small firm with 20 employees. The president of the company believes some of the employees are spending far too much time on the Internet doing tasks not related to work. The president asks you to start monitoring employees’ Internet usage without their knowledge, something you could easily do from a technological standpoint. • What do you do? • A. Start monitoring employees’ email and Web usage, as the president has asked • B. Suggest that an acceptable Internet-use policy be developed • C. Talk to employees and tell them what the president has in mind so they’ll change their habits Monster.com
Ethical Scenarios • 2) Carrie, an employee at an accounting firm, tells her colleague, Phil, that she found something during her work on an engagement that she believes is a problem. The client has dismissed the issue and asked her to “trust him on this one.” Furthermore, her Senior Manager on the engagement has been focused on finishing the engagement and has not addressed her concern. What should Carrie do? • A. Let the issue go. She was rejected the first time she raised it so it must not be a big deal • B. Avoid going around her Senior Manager at all costs. If she angers him, she may get a poor evaluation or reputation as a troublemaker • C. Consult with another superior, the Engagement Partner • D. Report her concern using one of the firm’s channels of communication KPMG, LLP
Consequences • Loss of Job • Prison • Loss of reputation • Loss of certifications
Conclusion Where do you think we will be in 10 years with regard to IT ethics? http://www.cnbc.com/id/27305287
“Do the right thing. It will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” -Mark Twain