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What is ETHICS?. The practice of making a principled choice between right and wrong.For a responsible person, ethical principles are an essential part of solving a problem. Using ethical principles as a basis for decision making prevents us from relying only on intuition or personal preference..
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1. Why Show We Care about Ethics?
2. What is ETHICS? The practice of making a principled choice between right and wrong.
For a responsible person, ethical principles are an essential part of solving a problem.
Using ethical principles as a basis for decision making prevents us from relying only on intuition or personal preference.
3. Why should we care about ethics?
Is computer ethics (ethics regarding information technology) really different from regular ethics?
Capabilities of computers lend special character to problems of ethics.
Difficult, often, to identify the ethical issues: I didnt know I did anything wrong.
Computer ethics have a strong link to policy or procedure.
4. Competing Factors in Decision Making Biological level: guided by drives for food, shelter, love
Guided by laws (government, church, culture)
Guided by an understanding of what is good, right, proper, moral, or ethical.
5. At any one time, influences from several levels affect or behavior. These influences often lead to competing outcomes, which must be weighed before we make judgments about how to act.
Decisions involving information technology incorporate many levels of influences: many shades of gray.
A risk in situations involving ethics is the risk of poor judgment. Decisions made with poor judgment can have a wide range of problematic results.
ETHICS is the practice of making principled choices.
6. Types of Ethical Choices Choosing Right from Wrong
Stealing, lying, cheating
Taboos of a commonsense morality
Choosing Right from Right
Situation is not clear; not black or white; contains some gray
Complexity of ethical choice: the necessity of choosing a course of action from 2 or more alternatives, each having some desirable result.
Choosing 2 or more goods / or lesser of 2 evils
7. Practical Approaches to Ethical Decision Making Defensible decisions
Using Law to Make Ethical Decisions
Legality versus Ethicality
8. The ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct http://www.acm.org/constitution/code.html
Purpose: to foster understanding about information technology and standards for its use.
Formal guideline to gaining a clear picture about a problem or dilemma, and beginnings of an ethical solution:
Is the act consistent with corporate policy?
Does the act violate corporate or professional codes of conduct or ethics?
Does the act violate the Golden Rule?
Does the act serve the majority rather than a minority?
9. Using Informal Guidelines to Make Ethical Decisions The Mom Test
The TV Test
The Smell Test
The Other Persons Shoes Test
The Market Test
10. The Principle of Harm Minimization A common standard for deciding right and wrong
Prescribes choosing the course of action that minimizes the amount of harm.
STAKEHOLDERs perspective: stakeholder is any person or organization with a stake in the decision.
HARM: any act, physical or psychological, that denies a stakeholder his or her reasonable rights.
11. How Rights and Duties Relate to Ethics Deontology: the study of rights and duties
Rights are inherent universal privileges
The right to know
The right to privacy
The right to property
12. Considering Duties Feel compelled by a moral obligation-the action cannot be avoided
Duties are basis for our definition of rights. If a person has rights, s/he also has corresponding dutiesduties are expected of an individual in society
The basic duty is harm minimization
13. Responsibility A concept closely related to duty is responsibility
Responsibility is a duty that is usually well defined and specific to a profession.
Information professionals have the personal duties we all have as individuals, as wells as professional responsibilities which are described in various codes of ethics.
14. Personal Duties Each person has the personal duty
To foster trust
To act with integrity
To do justice
To practice beneficence and nonmaleficence
To act with appropriate gratitude and make appropriate reparation
To work toward self-improvement
15. Professional Responsibilities Two factors apply to all professionals and influence their actions:
Professional relationships
Professional efficacy
Confidentiality
Impartiality
16. Consequentialism When we focus on the goals, ends, results, or consequences of an action, we are using the principle of consequentialism.
We judge the rightness of wrongness of an action by the outcomes.
Two major types:
1. egoism
2. utilitarianism
17. Egoism The concept of long-term rationality
Enlightened self-interest or prudence
If an action doesnt help you in the long term, it is foolish, or imprudent.
We use this ethical principle as justification when we do something that furthers our own welfare or serves our own advantage.
Good for me principle or ethics of arrogance
Self-interest, in form of company seeking to increase its profits, is a valid justification for many businesses
Results in ambiguity, so egoism needs to be guided and limited by other ethical principles.
18. Utilitarianism When our actions benefit others as well as ourselves, we are operating in the public interest.
We measure the usefulness, or utility, of our actions for all stakeholders.
This is utilitarianism, which helps a person judge, through a form of cost-benefit analysis, whether an action is ethical.
An action is right if it maximizes benefits over costs for all involved, everyone counting equally.
19. Kants Categorical Imperative 2 principles for examining whether a person has the right to act a certain way in a given situation:
Consistency: would it make sense to force everyone to take the action being studied?
Respect: We must treat people with dignity. People are ends in themselves, not means.
20. Summary In making ethical choices, answer the following questions:
Does the action serve the public interest or, at least, not cause unnecessary social harm?
Are any basic human rights violated?
Are any commonly accepted duties abridged?
The key to solving an ethical dilemma is to use as many logical approaches as possible to analyze the problem.
21. Ethics and Information Technology:Computers Dont Have Ethics,People Do Difficulties posed by computers:
Alters relationships among people
Information in electronic form is more fragile more easily changed and more vulnerable to unauthorized access: property rights, plagiarism, piracy, privacy
Efforts to protect information integrity, confidentiality, and availability often conflict with desire for benefits of information sharing
Lack of widespread means of authorization and authentication exposes IT to unethical practices.
22. Difficulties posed by People
The Order-of-Magnitude Effect
For each tenfold increase (an increase of one order of magnitude) in speed, our perception of what is going on changes dramatically.
The Effort Effect
The principle of unreasonable effort: if a task is not worth the effort, people will tend not to undertake it.
23. What is Unethical Computer Use? Social and Economic Issues
Job displacement
Work-related demands on computer professionals
Power and access to power: civil rights
Issues of Individual Practice
Development Process Issues
Issues involving Mangers and Subordinates
Processing Issues
Unreliability
Untimely Output
Unintended Data Use
24. (cont)
Issues Relating to the Workplace
Ergonomics
Monitoring
Issues of Data Collection, Storage, and Access
Data confidentiality, privacy, accuracy
Issues About EMail
Resource Exploitation Issues
Vendor-Client Issues
Issues of Computer Crime
25. Cases Case 3: Something for Everyone
Case 12: The Engineer and the Teacher
Case 13: Test Data
Case 17: Code Blue