This chapter discusses ethics and privacy as they relate to information technology. It outlines ethical issues into four categories: privacy issues, accuracy issues, property issues, and accessibility issues. It also discusses two rules courts have followed regarding privacy: the right to privacy must be balanced with societal needs, and the public's right to know supersedes an individual's privacy right. Finally, it identifies potential threats to privacy from data aggregators, electronic surveillance, personal information databases, and information shared online.
3. LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Define ethics, list and describe the three
fundamental tenets of ethics, and describe the
four categories of ethical issues related to
information technology.
2. Identify three places that store personal
data, and for each one discuss at least one
potential threat to the privacy of the data stored
there.
4. 3.1 Ethical Issues
Ethical Frameworks
Utilitarian approach
Rights approach
Fairness approach
Common good approach
5. General Framework for Ethics
1. Recognize an ethical issue
2. Get the facts
3. Evaluate alternative actions
4. Make a decision and test it
5. Act and reflect on the outcome of your
decision
6. Ethics in the Corporate Environment
Code of ethics
Fundamental tenets of ethics
Responsibility
Accountability
Liability
8. Ethics and Information Technology
Four categories of ethical issues
involving IT applications:
Privacy Issues
Accuracy Issues
Property Issues
Accessibility Issues
9. 3.2 Privacy
Court decisions have followed two rules:
(1) The right of privacy is not absolute.
Your privacy must be balanced against
the needs of society.
(2) The public’s right to know is superior to
the individual’s right of privacy.
10. Threats to Privacy
Data aggregators, digital dossiers, and
profiling
Electronic Surveillance
Personal Information in Databases
Information on Internet Bulletin Boards,
Newsgroups, and Social Networking Sites
13. Electronic Surveillance
See "The State of Surveillance" article in
BusinessWeek
See the surveillance slideshow
See additional surveillance slides
And you think you have privacy? (video)
16. Social Networking Sites Can
Cause You Problems
Anyone can post derogatory information about
you anonymously.
(See this Washington Post article.)
You can also hurt yourself, as this article
shows.
17. What Can You Do?
First, be careful what information you post on
social networking sites.
Second, a company, ReputationDefender, says
it can remove derogatory information from the
Web.
#5: Utilitarian approach: an ethical action is the one that provides the most good or does the least harm.
Rights approach: ethical action is the one that best protects and respects the moral rights of the
affected parties.
Fairness approach: ethical actions treat all humans equally, or if unequally, then fairly, based on some
defensible standard.
Common good approach: highlights the interlocking relationships that underlie all societies.
#7: A Code of Ethics is a collection of principles that are intended to guide decision making by members of an organization.
Responsibility means that you accept the consequences of your decisions and actions.
Accountability means a determination of who is responsible for actions that were taken.
Liability is a legal concept meaning that individuals have the right to recover the damages done to them by other individuals, organizations, or systems.
#8: The link will take you to online Appendix W3.1 for 14 ethics scenarios. Each of these scenarios elicits
interesting class discussions, because none are particularly “clear cut” as to what the “right thing to do” is.
#9: Privacy Issues involve collecting, storing and disseminating information about individuals.
Accuracy Issues involve the authenticity, fidelity and accuracy of information that is collected and processed.
Property Issues involve the ownership and value of information.
Accessibility Issues revolve around who should have access to information and whether they should have to pay for this access.
#10: Privacy is the right to be left alone and to be free of unreasonable personal intrusions.
#12: Data aggregators are companies that collect public data (e.g., real estate records, telephone numbers) and nonpublic data (e.g., social security numbers, financial data, police records, motor vehicle records) and integrate them to produce digital dossiers.
Digital dossier is an electronic description of you and your habits.
Profiling is the process of creating a digital dossier.
#13: Electronic Surveillance. The tracking of people‘s activities, online or offline, with the aid of computers.
The image demonstrates that many people are blissfully unaware that they can be under electronic surveillance while they are using their computers.
#14: The BusinessWeek article is an interesting look at the state of surveillance today.
The surveillance slideshow accompanies the BusinessWeek article.
The additional surveillance slides show modern surveillance equipment.
The video is a tongue-in-cheek look at how little privacy all of us have left. The video is a great example of the
impacts that data aggregators, digital dossiers, and profiling might have in the very near future.
#15: Personal Information in Databases. Information about individuals is being kept in many databases: banks, utilities co., govt. agencies, …etc.; the most visible locations are credit-reporting agencies.
Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian are the three best known credit reporting agencies.
Clicking on the logo of each company will take you to its homepage.
#16: Social Networking Sites often include electronic discussions such as chat rooms. These sites appear on the Internet, within corporate intranets, and on blogs.
A blog (Weblog) is an informal, personal journal that is frequently updated and intended for general public reading.
The logos represent popular social networking sites. Clicking on the logo will take you to the respective home pages.
#17: The second article shows students how information they (or others) post to
social networking sites can impact their lives, in particular, their job search.
This information may take the form of text, images, etc.
#18: Clicking on the ReputationDefender logo will take you to its homepage.
#19: Privacy Codes and Policies. An organization’s guidelines with respect to protecting the privacy of customers, clients, and employees.
Opt-out model of informed consent permits the company to collect personal information until the customer specifically requests that the data not be collected.
Opt-in model of informed consent means that organizations are prohibited from collecting any personal information unless the customer specifically authorizes it. (Preferred by privacy advocates.)
International Aspects of Privacy. Privacy issues that international organizations and governments face when information spans countries and jurisdictions.