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- Essay Name : 576.txt
- Uploader : Patrick McHugh
- Email Address : PMchugh300@aol.com
- Language : English
- Subject : Computer
- Title : Morality and Ethics and Computers
- Grade : 85
- School System : Jesuit Schools of Chicago
- Country : USA
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : 5/13/96
- Site found at : a link
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Morality and Ethics and Computers
- There are many different sides to the discussion on moral and ethical uses of
- computers. In many situations, the morality of a particular use of a computer is up to the
- individual to decide. For this reason, absolute laws about ethical computer usage is
- almost, but not entirely, impossible to define.
- The introduction of computers into the workplace has introduced many questions
- as well: Should employers make sure the workplace is designed to minimize health risks
- such as back strain and carpal tunnel syndrome for people who work with computers?
- Can employers prohibit employees from sending personal memos by electronic mail to a
- friend at the other side of the office? Should employers monitor employees' work on
- computers? If so, should employees be warned beforehand? If warned, does that make
- the practice okay? According to Kenneth Goodman, director of the Forum for Bioethics
- and Philosophy at the University of Miami, who teaches courses in computer ethics,
- "There's hardly a business that's not using computers."1 This makes these questions all
- the more important for today's society to answer.
- There are also many moral and ethical problems dealing with the use of computers
- in the medical field. In one particular case, a technician trusted what he thought a
- computer was telling him, and administered a deadly dose of radiation to a hospital
- patient.2 In cases like these, it is difficult to decide who's fault it is. It could have been the
- computer programmer's fault, but Goodman asks, "How much responsibility can you place
- on a machine?"3
- Many problems also occur when computers are used in education. Should
- computers replace actual teachers in the classroom? In some schools, computers and
- computer manuals have already started to replace teachers. I would consider this an
- unethical use of computers because computers do not have the ability to think and interact
- on an interpersonal basis.
- Computers "dehumanize human activity"4 by taking away many jobs and making
- many others "boring exercises in pushing the buttons that make the technology work." 5
- Complete privacy is almost impossible in this computer age. By using a credit card
- or check cashing card, entering a raffle, or subscribing to a magazine, people provide
- information about themselves that can be sold to marketers and distributed to data bases
- throughout the world. When people use the world-wide web, the sites they visit and
- download things from, make a record that can be traced back to the person.6 This is not
- protected, as it is when books are checked out of a library. Therefore, information about
- someone's personal preferences and interests can be sold to anyone. A health insurance
- company could find out if a particular person had bought alcohol or cigarettes and charge
- that person a higher rate because he or she is a greater health risk. Although something
- like this has not been reported yet, there are no laws against it, at this point.
- More and more data base companies are monitoring individuals with little
- regulation. "Other forms of monitoring-such as genetic screening-could eventually be
- used to discriminate against individuals not because of their past but because of statistical
- expectations about their future."7 For instance, people who do not have AIDS but carry
- the antibodies are being discharged from the U.S. military and also fired from some jobs.
- Who knows if this kind of medical information could lead employers to make decisions of
- employment based on possible future illnesses rather than on job qualifications. Is this an
- ethical use of computers?
- One aspect of computers that is surely immoral and unethical is computer crime,
- which has been on the rise lately. There are many different types of computer crime.
- Three main types of crimes are making computer viruses, making illegal copies of
- software, and actually stealing computers.
- Computer viruses have been around for a decade but they became infamous when
- the Michelangelo virus caused a scare on March 6, 1992. According to the National
- Computer Security Association in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, there are 6000 known viruses
- worldwide and about 200 new ones show up every month.8 These viruses are spread
- quickly and easily and can destroy all information on a computer's hard drive. Now,
- people must buy additional software just to detect viruses and possibly repair infected
- files.
- Making illegal copies of software is also a growing problem in the computer
- world. Most people find no problem in buying a computer program and giving a copy to
- their friend or co-worker. Some people even make copies and sell them to others.
- Software companies are starting to require computer users to type in a code before using
- the software. They do this in many ways. Sometimes, they require you to use a "code
- wheel" or look in a book for the code. The software companies go through this trouble to
- discourage people from making illegal copies because every copy that is made is money
- the company lost.
- One other thing that is just starting to become a problem is actual computer theft.
- With the introduction of notebook computers came a rise in computer theft. The same
- qualities that make these computers perfect for business travelers-their small size and light
- weight- make them very easy for thieves to steal as well. In 1994, 295,000 computers
- were reported stolen with resulting losses totaling over 981 million dollars. 9 The amount
- lost to theft is about twice the amount lost in all forms of computer malfunction or
- breakage.
- The biggest news related to computers lately seems to always be about the
- Internet. The Internet began decades ago, but is just becoming popular with the general
- public now that technology is advancing and becoming cheaper. There are many aspects
- of the Internet that can lead people into discussions concerning morality and ethics.
- Much of the discussion of the Internet has to do with freedom of speech and the
- First Amendment. Most Americans probably believe that the First Amendment is moral
- because it is a national law. The problems arise because different people interpret the First
- Amendment in different ways. In most cases since 1776, the First Amendment has been
- easily defined and understood, but every once in a while, a situation appears which blurs
- the lines. The Internet has caused one of these situations.
- There is information on the Internet about everything from drugs to making
- bombs. The United States government is trying to decide whether they should or should
- not censor material on the Internet. The government does not censor information like this
- in public libraries, so why should it censor this information on the Internet? The
- government censors information like this on television though, so why wouldn't it censor
- this on the Internet? If the government goes strictly by the First Amendment, it would not
- censor anything on the Internet because that would be a violation of free speech. It is
- obvious though, that the government does not always go directly by the First Amendment,
- so this leaves the topic open to discussion.
- Some people argue that this information would be dangerous if it got into the
- wrong hands. Much of the information in the world would be dangerous if it got into
- the wrong hands. Does this mean that we should perform background checks and
- psychiatric tests on everyone before we give them any information? I believe it is
- unethical to withhold information from anyone. All information should be given out
- freely. It is up to the individual to decide how to use the knowledge they have.
- Many people complain that there is a large number of sick and demented people on
- the Internet. There are a large number of sick and demented people in the "real" world
- as well. In fact, the same people who are on the Internet are in the real world, too. There
- is not much we can do about them except arrest the people who take their sickness and
- dementia too far and break the law.
- Computers can be harmful and beneficial to people in many different ways. The
- ways computers are beneficial are the most obvious. Computers can entertain us, they can
- save us time and energy, as well as saving us from performing boring and laborious tasks.
- Computers also can be physically harmful to people. People who use computers
- too much can suffer from vision loss, to varying degrees, due to staring at the screen for
- extended lengths of time . They can also have problems with the muscles in their hands
- from typing so often. They can acquire back problems from sitting in chairs behind desks
- at computer screens, all day long.
- Some people say that computers allow humans to cheat. They give us the
- answers. They allow us to stop thinking. They believe it is unethical for the computers to
- do the work for us. These people may be right in that some humans allow computers to
- do work for them, but then if people did not make use of the new inventions and time-
- savers, farmers would still be plowing with a horse and we'd still be cooking on an open
- fire. Until computers exhibit actual artificial intelligence, though, we are still the ones
- doing the thinking. We program the computers to do what we want them to do.
- In conclusion, I believe that, in most situations involving computers, the morality
- or immorality of an action is up to the individual to decide, as it would be if computers
- were not involved. We have seen, though, that there are many instances in which people
- have, without a doubt, acted immorally and unethically.
-
- 1 Timothy O'Conner, "Computers Creating Ethical Dilemmas," USA Today Magazine
- (September 1995) 7
- 2 Max Frankel, "Cyberrights," The New York Times Magazine (February 12, 1995) 26
- 3 O'Conner 7
- 4 James Coates, "Unabomber Case Underscores an On-Line Evil," Chicago Tribune (April
- 14, 1996) 5
- 5 Coates 5
- 6 O'Conner 7
- 7 Tom Forester, Computers in the Human Context (Cambridge: The MIT Press,1989) 403
- 8 Stephen A. Booht, "Doom Virus," Popular Mechanics (June 1995) 51
- 9 Philip Albinus, "Have You Seen This PC?," Home Office Computing (February 1996) 17
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