Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

ITIS 1210 Introduction to Web-Based Information Systems Ethical & Social Issues.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "ITIS 1210 Introduction to Web-Based Information Systems Ethical & Social Issues."— Presentation transcript:

1 ITIS 1210 Introduction to Web-Based Information Systems Ethical & Social Issues

2 Objectives  What ethical, social, and political issues are raised by information systems?  Are there specific principles for conduct that can be used to guide decisions about ethical dilemmas?  Why does contemporary information systems technology pose challenges to the protection of individual privacy and intellectual property?

3  How have information systems affected everyday life?  How can organizations develop corporate policies for ethical conduct? Objectives

4  Moral risks of new technology  Technology change = individual choice change  Risk/reward balance shifts  Corporate ethics policies that include information systems issues Objectives

5 Ethics and Society  What are computer ethics?  Moral guidelines that govern use of computers and information systems  In what situations?  Unauthorized use of computer systems  Information privacy  Intellectual property rights  Software theft  Information accuracy  Codes of conduct

6 Ethics and Society What do you think about ethical issues?

7 Ethics and Society What do you think about ethical issues?

8 Ethics and Society What do you think about ethical issues?

9 Ethics and Society  What are the ethics of using computers to alter output?  Alteration could lead to deliberately misleading photographs

10 Ethics and Society

11 http://www.nppa.org/news_and_events/news/2007/04/toledo01.html

12 Ethics and Society http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/006020.html

13 Ethics and Society

14

15

16  Principles of right and wrong  Can be used by individuals  Acting as free moral agents  To make choices to guide their behavior  IT provides opportunities for rapid social change that threaten existing balances of power, money, rights, etc. Ethics

17  Illustrates the dynamics connecting  Ethical, social, and political issues  Identifies the moral dimensions of the “information society”  Across individual, social, and political levels of action A Model for Thinking About Ethics

18  Information rights and obligations  Relative to personal information  Property rights  How is intellectual property affected by IT?  Accountability and control  Who is liable?  System quality  What standards should society demand of data/systems?  Quality of life  How does IT affect our culture? A Model for Thinking About Ethics

19

20  Information systems proliferate because:  Computing power doubles every 18 months  Dependence on computer systems  Rapidly declining data storage costs  Easy maintenance of individual databases  Datamining advances  Analysis of vast quantities of data  Networking advances and the Internet  Remotely accessing personal data Key Technology Trends

21

22  Responsibility  Accepting the potential costs, duties, and obligations for decisions made  Accountability  Mechanism to assess who took (or should have taken) responsibility for decisions made and actions taken Basic Concepts

23  Liability  Extends responsibility into the legal area  Permits individuals to recover for damage suffered  Due process  Laws are well-known and understood, with an ability to appeal to higher authorities to ensure the correct application of laws Basic Concepts

24  Golden rule  Do unto others as you would have them do unto you  Immanuel Kant’s categorical imperative  If an action is not right for everyone to take, then it is not right for anyone  If everyone acted like this, would society be better? Candidate Ethical Principles

25  Descartes’ rule of change  If an action cannot be taken repeatedly, then it should not be taken even once  Slippery Slope theory  Utilitarian principle  Take the action that achieves the greater good. Assumes: (1) Choices can be ranked and (2) Can understand the consequences of various courses of action Candidate Ethical Principles

26  Risk aversion principle  Take the action that produces the least harm or incurs the least cost  Balance failure cost and probability of occurrence  Ethical “no free lunch” rule  All tangible and intangible objects are owned by a creator who is due compensation for their work Candidate Ethical Principles

27  Information system may create ethical dilemmas where one set of interests is pitted against another  Minimize drains on productivity  Voice recognition systems eliminated thousands of operator positions  Prevent wastage of resources for non- business activities  Monitoring employee activity Real-World Ethical Dilemmas

28  Moral Dimensions of IS  Information Rights  Property Rights  Accountability, Liability, Control  System Quality  Quality of Life  Ethical, social, political issues Information Rights

29  Privacy  Claim of individuals to be left alone, free from surveillance or interference from other individuals, organizations, or the state  Fair information practices  Set of principles governing the collection and use of information on the basis of U.S. and European privacy laws Information Rights

30

31  Freedom of Information Act, 1968  Privacy Act of 1974  Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986  Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act of 1988  Computer Security Act of 1987  Federal Managers Financial Integrity Act of 1982 Privacy Laws

32  European privacy protection based on informed consent  Consent given with  Knowledge of all facts  Needed to make a rational decision Privacy Laws

33  Opt-out model  Informed consent permitting the collection of personal information  Consumer must take an affirmative action specifically requesting the data not to be collected  Without this action, information will be collected, possibly without the user’s knowledge. Challenges to Privacy

34  Opt-in model  Informed consent prohibiting an organization from collecting any personal information  Individual has to approve information collection and use  Without this specific approval, companies may not collect information Challenges to Privacy

35  Under what conditions should the privacy of others be invaded?  Under what conditions is it legitimate to intrude into others’ lives through unobtrusive surveillance, through market research, or by whatever means? Challenges to Privacy

36  Do we have to inform people that we are eavesdropping?  Do we have to inform people that we are using credit history information for employment screening purposes? Challenges to Privacy

37  www.trafficland.com www.trafficland.com  www.earthcam.com www.earthcam.com  Downtown Charlotte, Christmas 2006 Downtown Charlotte, Christmas 2006 Downtown Charlotte, Christmas 2006  Via cell phone Via cell phone Via cell phone

38  Concerns the development of “expectations of privacy” or privacy norms, as well as public attitudes  In what areas of life do we have the expectation of privacy? Social Issues

39  Surveillance Equipment Surveillance Equipment Surveillance Equipment  School bus School bus School bus

40  Concern the development of statutes  Govern the relations between record keepers and individuals Political Issues

41  Intellectual property  Intangible creations protected by law  Inventions, writings, and works of art  Protected under three legal traditions:  Trade Secrets  Copyrights  Patent Property Rights

42  Trade secret  Intellectual work or product belonging to business, not in public domain  Copyright  Statutory grant protecting intellectual property from getting copied for 28 years  Patents  Legal document granting the owner an exclusive monopoly on the ideas behind an invention for 20 years Property Rights

43  Digital media are:  Easy to reproduce (physical media not necessary)  Easy to alter  Hard to establish ownership of Property Rights

44  Ethical issues  Protection of intellectual property (Is it OK to copy for personal use?)  Social issues  Current intellectual property laws breaking down (easy to break a law). Does this discourage creativity?  Political issues  Creation of new property protection measures Challenges to Property Rights

45  Information technology challenges existing liability law  Who is liable if a software-controlled machine injures someone? The machine manufacturer, the programmer, someone else?  Is AOL responsible for offensive content distributed by AOL but not necessarily under AOL’s direct control? Liability

46  Ethical issues  Who is morally responsible for consequences of use?  Social issues  What should society expect and allow?  Political issues  To what extent should government intervene?  Where is the balance between service providers and users? Liability

47  Three major causes of system failures  Bugs  Hardware failures  Poor input data System Quality

48

49  Ethical issues  At what point do you release the software?  Social issues  Should people be encouraged to believe systems are infallible  What are the potential consequences if they do?  Political Issues  Who sets laws of responsibility and accountability: Congress or marketplace? System Quality

50  Maintaining boundaries  Family, work, and leisure  “Do anything anywhere” environment blurring boundaries between work and family time  Dependence and vulnerability  No regulatory or standard-setting forces for the Internet as there were for telephones, electrical utilities, radio, television, etc. Quality of Life

51  Computer crime  Commission of illegal acts through the use of a computer or against a computer system  Computer abuse  Commission of acts involving a computer that may not be illegal but are considered unethical Quality of Life

52

53  Employment  Trickle-down technology and reengineering job loss  Causes millions of middle-level managers and clerical workers to lose their jobs  Equity and access  Increasing racial and social class cleavages  Society of computer literate and skilled, versus computer illiterate and unskilled Quality of Life


Download ppt "ITIS 1210 Introduction to Web-Based Information Systems Ethical & Social Issues."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google