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Lecture 3 Ethics in the Workplace Privacy and Social Networks.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 3 Ethics in the Workplace Privacy and Social Networks."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 3 Ethics in the Workplace Privacy and Social Networks

2 Questions about Assigned Reading What is considered "fair game" for a company collecting information about prospective employees? What would you consider to be publically accessible information? What are some issues with the current or expanded use of E-Verify? What would you consider to be "fair game" for individuals in crafting their online persona? How to you feel about employers requiring drug testing (as a prerequisite for hiring, once after hiring, periodically)? How would you feel about DNA scanning by employers? What are some issues with mixing personal and work-related social media accounts? What are some issues with doing work on your own personal devices? How do you feel about employers monitoring your daily Web searches, online actives, texting, email, and phone conversations? What are some issues of putting in extra work for your employer in the evenings and on the week-end? Do you agree that the CFAA should be used to make "violation of terms of use" a crime?

3 Is violating the terms of use of a website a crime under the CFAA’s provision about exceeding one’s authorized access for the purpose of committing fraud and obtaining something of value? This question is both a legal and a social one: Does it make sense for violation of terms of use to be a crime? The first major case involved a woman who pretended to be a 16-year-old boy on MySpace, began an online flirting relationship with a 13-year-old girl in her neighborhood (a former friend of the woman’s daughter), then broke off the relationship and sent cruel messages. The girl killed herself. The woman’s behavior was nasty and unethical. People wanted to see her punished, but it was not clear that she had broken any law. Prosecutors charged her with illegal hacking under the CFAA. They said she exceeded authorized access because she violated MySpace’s terms of use requiring that profile information be truthful. A jury convicted the woman, but the judge reversed the conviction. He said in effect that this application of the law was too broad. Normally, a breach of contract is not a criminal offence, and the CFAA does not state or suggest that it has become one. An ordinary, reasonable person does not expect that violating the terms of use of a website is a criminal offense. The decision of one judge, though, does not settle the legal situation. Prosecutions and lawsuits continue to treat violation of terms of use as a crime under the CFAA. Is Violation of the Terms of Use of a Website a Crime? A Gift of Fire: Social Legal and Ethical Issues for Computing Technology - Sara Baase

4 Natick Future Force Warrior Natick's Future Force Warrior will include location tracking, vital signs monitoring, autonomous/remote triage and first aid, enhanced situational awareness.


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