Ian Sample, The Guardian; Maths and tech specialists need Hippocratic oath, says academic
"“We need a Hippocratic oath in the same way it exists for medicine,” Fry
said. “In medicine, you learn about ethics from day one. In
mathematics, it’s a bolt-on at best. It has to be there from day one and
at the forefront of your mind in every step you take.”...
The genetics testing firm 23andMe was a case in point, she said.
“We literally hand over our most private data, our DNA, but we’re not
just consenting for ourselves, we are consenting for our children, and
our children’s children. Maybe we don’t live in a world where people are
genetically discriminated against now, but who’s to say in 100 years
that we won’t? And we are are paying to add our DNA to that dataset.”"
Issues and developments related to ethics, information, and technologies, examined in the ethics and intellectual property graduate courses I teach at the University of Pittsburgh School of Computing and Information. My Bloomsbury book "Ethics, Information, and Technology" will be published in Summer 2025. Kip Currier, PhD, JD
Monday, September 16, 2019
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Northeastern researchers team up with Accenture to offer a road map for artificial intelligence ethics oversight; Northeastern University, August 29, 2019
Khalida Sarwari, Northeastern University; Northeastern researchers team up with Accenture to offer a road map for artificial intelligence ethics oversight
"Now, Northeastern professors John Basl and Ron Sandler are offering organizations guidance for how to create a well-designed and effective committee based on similar models used in biomedical research.
Maintaining that an ethics committee that is adequately resourced and thoughtfully designed can play an important role in mitigating digital risks and maintaining trust between an organization and the public, the researchers provide a framework for such a system in a new report produced in collaboration with global professional services company Accenture...
“If you want to build a committee that works effectively and if you really want to build ethical capacity within an organization, it’s a significant undertaking where you can’t just throw together a few people with ethical expertise,” says Sandler.
Added Basl: “We lay out the kinds of experts an organization will need—someone who knows local laws, someone who knows ethics, a variety of technical experts, and members of an affected community. Who those individuals are, or what their particular expertise is, depends on the kind of technology being developed and deployed.”"
"Now, Northeastern professors John Basl and Ron Sandler are offering organizations guidance for how to create a well-designed and effective committee based on similar models used in biomedical research.
Maintaining that an ethics committee that is adequately resourced and thoughtfully designed can play an important role in mitigating digital risks and maintaining trust between an organization and the public, the researchers provide a framework for such a system in a new report produced in collaboration with global professional services company Accenture...
“If you want to build a committee that works effectively and if you really want to build ethical capacity within an organization, it’s a significant undertaking where you can’t just throw together a few people with ethical expertise,” says Sandler.
Added Basl: “We lay out the kinds of experts an organization will need—someone who knows local laws, someone who knows ethics, a variety of technical experts, and members of an affected community. Who those individuals are, or what their particular expertise is, depends on the kind of technology being developed and deployed.”"
Building data and AI ethics committees; Accenture.com, August 20, 2019
Accenture.com; Building data and AI ethics committees
"In brief
"In brief
- Organizations face a difficult challenge when it comes to ethically-informed data collection, sharing and use.
- There is growing demand for incorporating ethical considerations into products and services involving big data, AI and machine learning.
- Outside of mere legal compliance, there is little guidance on how to incorporate this ethical consideration.
- To fill this gap, Northeastern University and Accenture explore the development of effective and well-functioning data and AI ethics committees."
Saturday, September 14, 2019
How to Build an AI Ethics Committee; The Wall Street Journal, August 30, 2019
Jared Council, The Wall Street Journal; How to Build an AI Ethics Committee
"A new guidebook aims to help organizations set up data and artificial-intelligence ethics committees and better deal with the ethical issues associated with the technology."
New road map provides guidelines for starting an ethics committee for artificial-intelligence and data concerns
"A new guidebook aims to help organizations set up data and artificial-intelligence ethics committees and better deal with the ethical issues associated with the technology."
CS department hires Ethics TAs; The Brown Daily Herald, September 5, 2019
Sarah Wang, The Brown Daily Herald;
The CS department is already incoorporating ethics into its curriculum through multiple courses such as CSCI 1951I: “CS for Social Change,” but the department hopes ETAs will encourage students to view the topic as a more fundamental aspect of CS."
CS department hires Ethics TAs
Newly-hired teaching assistants to integrate ethics into computer science
"Last spring, the Department of Computer Science announced the inaugural hiring of 10 Ethics Teaching Assistants, who will develop and deliver curricula around ethics and society in five of the department’s largest courses.
The department created the ETA program to acknowledge the impact that the products and services created by computer scientists have on society, said Professor of Computer Science and Department Chair Ugur Cetintemel. Cetintemel, who helped spearhead the program, said that it was important for concentrators to think critically about the usage and possible misuse of the solutions they build. “We want our concentrators to think about the ethical and societal implications of what they do, not as an afterthought but as another fundamental dimension they should consider as they develop their work,” he said...The CS department is already incoorporating ethics into its curriculum through multiple courses such as CSCI 1951I: “CS for Social Change,” but the department hopes ETAs will encourage students to view the topic as a more fundamental aspect of CS."
Justin Weinberg, Daily Nous; Philosophers Win €17.9 Million Grant for Study of the Ethics of Disruptive Technologies
"A project on the ethics of socially disruptive technologies, led by Philip Brey, professor of philosophy of technology at the Department of Philosophy at the University of Twente and scientific director of the 4TU.Centre for Ethics and Technology, has received a €17.9 million (approximately $19.6 million) grant from the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science’s Gravitation program.
The other researchers involved in the 10-year project are Ibo van de Poel (TU Delft), Ingrid Robeyns (Utrecht University), Sabine Roeser (TU Delft), Peter-Paul Verbeek (University of Twente), and Wijnand IJsselsteijn (TU Eindhoven).
Socially disruptive technologies include artificial intelligence, robotics, nanomedicine, molecular biology, neurotechnology, and climate technology, among other things. A press release from the University of Twente describes what the researchers will be working on:
They will be developing new methods needed not only to better understand the development and implementation of the new generation of disruptive technologies, but also to evaluate them from a moral perspective and to intervene in the way technology continues to develop. This includes the development of an approach to ethical and philosophical aspects of a disruptive technology that is widely applicable. Another important aspect of the program is the cooperation between ethicists, philosophers and technical scientists aimed at finding better methods for responsible and sustainable innovation. One objective of the programme is to innovate ethics and philosophy in the broadest sense by researching how classical ethical values and philosophical concepts are being challenged by modern technology."
Orwellabama? Crimson Tide Track Locations to Keep Students at Games; The New York Times, September 12, 2019
Billy Witz, The New York Times; Orwellabama? Crimson Tide Track Locations to Keep Students at Games
Coach
Nick Saban gets peeved at students leaving routs early. An app ties
sticking around to playoff tickets, but also prompts concern from
students and privacy watchdogs.
"Greg
Byrne, Alabama’s athletic director, said privacy concerns rarely came
up when the program was being discussed with other departments and
student groups. Students who download the Tide Loyalty Points app will
be tracked only inside the stadium, he said, and they can close the app —
or delete it — once they leave the stadium. “If anybody has a phone,
unless you’re in airplane mode or have it off, the cellular companies
know where you are,” he said.
Thursday, September 12, 2019
The misinformation age; Axios, September 12, 2019
Scott Rosenberg, David Nather, Axios; The misinformation age
"Hostile powers undermining
elections. Deepfake video and audio. Bots and trolls, phishing and fake
news — plus of course old-fashioned spin and lies.
Why it matters:
The sheer volume of assaults on fact and truth is undermining trust not
just in politics and government, but also in business, tech, science
and health care as well.
- Beginning with this article, Axios is launching a series to help you navigate this new avalanche of misinformation, and illuminate its impact on America and the globe, through 2020 and beyond.
Our culture now broadly distrusts most claims to truth.
Majorities of Americans say they've lost trust in the federal
government and each other — and think that lack of trust gets in the way
of solving problems, according to a Pew Research Center survey."
'Ethics slam' packs pizzeria; The Herald Journal, September 10, 2019
Ashtyn Asay, The Herald Journal; 'Ethics slam' packs pizzeria
"The ethics slam was sponsored by the Weber State University Richard Richards Institute for Ethics, the USU Philosophy Club, and the Society for Women in Philosophy. It was organized by Robison-Greene and her husband, Richard Greene, a professor of philosophy and director of the Richard Richards Institute for Ethics.
This is the seventh ethics slam put together by Greene and Robison-Greene, whose collective goal is to encourage civil discourse and generate rich conversations within a respectful community.
This goal appeared to be met on Monday evening, as ethics slam participants engaged in polite conversation and debate for almost two hours. Opinions were challenged and controversial points were made, but Greene and Robison-Greene kept the conversation on track...
"The ethics slam was sponsored by the Weber State University Richard Richards Institute for Ethics, the USU Philosophy Club, and the Society for Women in Philosophy. It was organized by Robison-Greene and her husband, Richard Greene, a professor of philosophy and director of the Richard Richards Institute for Ethics.
This is the seventh ethics slam put together by Greene and Robison-Greene, whose collective goal is to encourage civil discourse and generate rich conversations within a respectful community.
This goal appeared to be met on Monday evening, as ethics slam participants engaged in polite conversation and debate for almost two hours. Opinions were challenged and controversial points were made, but Greene and Robison-Greene kept the conversation on track...
"The next ethics slam will be at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 at the Pleasant Valley Branch of the Weber County Library. The topic of discussion will be: “Is censorship ever appropriate?”"
Māori anger as Air New Zealand seeks to trademark 'Kia Ora' logo; The Guardian, September 12, 2019
Eleanor Ainge Roy, The Guardian; Māori anger as Air New Zealand seeks to trademark 'Kia Ora' logo
"New Zealand’s national carrier, Air New Zealand, has offended the country’s Māori people by attempting to trademark an image of the words “kia ora”; the greeting for hello."
"New Zealand’s national carrier, Air New Zealand, has offended the country’s Māori people by attempting to trademark an image of the words “kia ora”; the greeting for hello."
Wednesday, September 11, 2019
How an Élite University Research Center Concealed Its Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein; The New Yorker, September 6, 2019
Ronan Farrow, The New Yorker;
How an Élite University Research Center Concealed Its Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein
New documents show that the M.I.T. Media Lab was aware of Epstein’s status as a convicted sex offender, and that Epstein directed contributions to the lab far exceeding the amounts M.I.T. has publicly admitted.
"Current and former faculty and staff of the media lab described a pattern of concealing Epstein’s involvement with the institution. Signe Swenson, a former development associate and alumni coordinator at the lab, told me that she resigned in 2016 in part because of her discomfort about the lab’s work with Epstein. She said that the lab’s leadership made it explicit, even in her earliest conversations with them, that Epstein’s donations had to be kept secret...
Swenson said that, even though she resigned over the lab’s relationship with Epstein, her participation in what she took to be a coverup of his contributions has weighed heavily on her since. Her feelings of guilt were revived when she learned of recent statements from Ito and M.I.T. leadership that she believed to be lies. “I was a participant in covering up for Epstein in 2014,” she told me. “Listening to what comments are coming out of the lab or M.I.T. about the relationship—I just see exactly the same thing happening again.”"
He Who Must Not Be Tolerated; The New York Times, September 8, 2019
Kara Swisher, The New York Times;
He Who Must Not Be Tolerated
Joi
Ito’s fall from grace for his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was
much deserved. But his style of corner-cutting ethics is all too common
in tech.
"Voldemort?
Of all the terrible details of the gross fraud that the former head of the M.I.T. Media Lab, Joichi Ito, and his minions perpetrated in trying to cover up donations
by Jeffrey Epstein to the high-profile tech research lab, perhaps
giving a pedophile a nickname of a character in a book aimed at children
was the most awful.
“The effort to
conceal the lab’s contact with Epstein was so widely known that some
staff in the office of the lab’s director, Joi Ito, referred to Epstein
as Voldemort or ‘he who must not be named,’ ” wrote Ronan Farrow in The
New Yorker, in his eviscerating account of the moral and leadership failings of one of the digital industry’s top figures."
The Moral Rot of the MIT Media Lab; Slate, September 8, 2019
Justin Peters, Slate; The Moral Rot of the MIT Media Lab
"Over the course of the past century, MIT became one of the best brands in the world, a name that confers instant credibility and stature on all who are associated with it. Rather than protect the inherent specialness of this brand, the Media Lab soiled it again and again by selling its prestige to banks, drug companies, petroleum companies, carmakers, multinational retailers, at least one serial sexual predator, and others who hoped to camouflage their avarice with the sheen of innovation. There is a big difference between taking money from someone like Epstein and taking it from Nike or the Department of Defense, but the latter choices pave the way for the former."
"Over the course of the past century, MIT became one of the best brands in the world, a name that confers instant credibility and stature on all who are associated with it. Rather than protect the inherent specialness of this brand, the Media Lab soiled it again and again by selling its prestige to banks, drug companies, petroleum companies, carmakers, multinational retailers, at least one serial sexual predator, and others who hoped to camouflage their avarice with the sheen of innovation. There is a big difference between taking money from someone like Epstein and taking it from Nike or the Department of Defense, but the latter choices pave the way for the former."
Thursday, September 5, 2019
AI Ethics Guidelines Every CIO Should Read; Information Week, August 7, 2019
John McClurg, Information Week; AI Ethics Guidelines Every CIO Should Read
"Technology experts predict the rate
of adoption of artificial intelligence and machine learning will
skyrocket in the next two years. These advanced technologies will spark
unprecedented business gains, but along the way enterprise leaders will
be called to quickly grapple with a smorgasbord of new ethical dilemmas.
These include everything from AI algorithmic bias and data privacy
issues to public safety concerns from autonomous machines running on AI.
Because AI technology and use cases are changing so rapidly, chief
information officers and other executives are going to find it difficult
to keep ahead of these ethical concerns without a roadmap. To guide
both deep thinking and rapid decision-making about emerging AI
technologies, organizations should consider developing an internal AI
ethics framework."
Does the data industry need a code of ethics?; The Scotsman, August 29, 2019
David Lee, The Scotsman; Does the data industry need a code of ethics?
"Docherty says the whole area of data ethics is still emerging: “It’s where all the hype is now – it used to be big data that everyone talked about, now it’s data ethics. It’s fundamental, and embedding it across an organisation will give competitive advantage.”
So what is The Data Lab, set up in 2015, doing itself in this ethical space? “We’re ensuring data ethics training is baked in to the core technology training of all Masters students, so they are asking all the right questions,” says Docherty."
"Docherty says the whole area of data ethics is still emerging: “It’s where all the hype is now – it used to be big data that everyone talked about, now it’s data ethics. It’s fundamental, and embedding it across an organisation will give competitive advantage.”
So what is The Data Lab, set up in 2015, doing itself in this ethical space? “We’re ensuring data ethics training is baked in to the core technology training of all Masters students, so they are asking all the right questions,” says Docherty."
Teaching ethics in computer science the right way with Georgia Tech's Charles Isbell; TechCrunch, September 5, 2019
Greg Epstein, TechCrunch; Teaching ethics in computer science the right way with Georgia Tech's Charles Isbell
"The new fall semester is upon us, and at elite private colleges and universities, it’s hard to find a trendier major than Computer Science. It’s also becoming more common for such institutions to prioritize integrating ethics into their CS studies, so students don’t just learn about how to build software, but whether or not they should build it in the first place. Of course, this begs questions about how much the ethics lessons such prestigious schools are teaching are actually making a positive impression on students.
But at a time when demand for qualified computer scientists is skyrocketing around the world and far exceeds supply, another kind of question might be even more important: Can computer science be transformed from a field largely led by elites into a profession that empowers vastly more working people, and one that trains them in a way that promotes ethics and an awareness of their impact on the world around them?
Enter Charles Isbell of Georgia Tech, a humble and unassuming star of inclusive and ethical computer science. Isbell, a longtime CS professor at Georgia Tech, enters this fall as the new Dean and John P. Imlay Chair of Georgia Tech’s rapidly expanding College of Computing."
"The new fall semester is upon us, and at elite private colleges and universities, it’s hard to find a trendier major than Computer Science. It’s also becoming more common for such institutions to prioritize integrating ethics into their CS studies, so students don’t just learn about how to build software, but whether or not they should build it in the first place. Of course, this begs questions about how much the ethics lessons such prestigious schools are teaching are actually making a positive impression on students.
But at a time when demand for qualified computer scientists is skyrocketing around the world and far exceeds supply, another kind of question might be even more important: Can computer science be transformed from a field largely led by elites into a profession that empowers vastly more working people, and one that trains them in a way that promotes ethics and an awareness of their impact on the world around them?
Enter Charles Isbell of Georgia Tech, a humble and unassuming star of inclusive and ethical computer science. Isbell, a longtime CS professor at Georgia Tech, enters this fall as the new Dean and John P. Imlay Chair of Georgia Tech’s rapidly expanding College of Computing."
His Cat’s Death Left Him Heartbroken. So He Cloned It.; The New York Times, September 4, 2019
Sui-Lee Wee, The New York Times; His Cat’s Death Left Him Heartbroken. So He Cloned It.
"China’s genetics know-how is growing
rapidly. Ever since Chinese scientists cloned a female goat in 2000,
they have succeeded in producing the world’s first primate clones, editing the embryos of monkeys to insert genes associated with autism and mental illness, and creating superstrong dogs
by tinkering with their genes. Last year, the country stunned the world
after a Chinese scientist announced that he had created the world’s first genetically edited babies.
Pet
cloning is largely unregulated and controversial where it is done, but
in China the barriers are especially low. Many Chinese people do not
think that using animals for medical research or cosmetics testing is
cruel, or that pet cloning is potentially problematic. There are also no
laws against animal cruelty."
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
What's The Difference Between Compliance And Ethics?; Forbes, May 9, 2019
Bruce Weinstein, Forbes; What's The Difference Between Compliance And Ethics?
"As important as both compliance and ethics are, ethics holds us to a higher standard, in my view. It's crucial to respect your institution's rules and policies, as well as the relevant laws and regulations, but your duties don't stop there.
High-character leaders ask, "What is required of me?" but they don't leave it at that. Ethical leaders also ask, "What is the right thing to do? How would an honorable person behave in this situation?"
The Ethics of Hiding Your Data From the Machines; Wired, August 22, 2019
Molly Wood, Wired;
"In the case of the company I met with, the data collection they’re doing is all good. They want every participant in their longitudinal labor study to opt in, and to be fully informed about what’s going to happen with the data about this most precious and scary and personal time in their lives.
But when I ask what’s going to happen if their company is ever sold, they go a little quiet."
The Ethics of Hiding Your Data From the Machines
"In the case of the company I met with, the data collection they’re doing is all good. They want every participant in their longitudinal labor study to opt in, and to be fully informed about what’s going to happen with the data about this most precious and scary and personal time in their lives.
But when I ask what’s going to happen if their company is ever sold, they go a little quiet."
Regulators Fine Google $170 Million for Violating Children’s Privacy on YouTube; The New York Times, September 4, 2019
Natasha Singer and Kate Conger, The New York Times;
Regulators Fine Google $170 Million for Violating Children’s Privacy on YouTube
"Google on Wednesday agreed to pay a record $170 million fine and to make changes to protect children’s privacy on YouTube, as regulators said the video site had knowingly and illegally harvested personal information from youngsters and used that data to profit by targeting them with ads.
The measures were part of a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission and New York’s attorney general. They said YouTube had violated a federal children’s privacy law known as the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA."
'Sense of urgency', as top tech players seek AI ethical rules; techxplore.com, September 2, 2019
techxplore.com; 'Sense of urgency', as top tech players seek AI ethical rules
"Some two dozen high-ranking representatives of the global and Swiss economies, as well as scientists and academics, met in Geneva for the first Swiss Global Digital Summit aimed at seeking agreement on ethical guidelines to steer technological development...
Microsoft president Brad Smith insisted on the importance that "technology be guided by values, and that those values be translated into principles and that those principles be pursued by concrete steps."
"We are the first generation of people who have the power to build machines with the capability to make decisions that have in the past only been made by people," he told reporters.
He stressed the need for "transparency" and "accountability ... to ensure that the people who create technology, including at companies like the one I work for remain accountable to the public at large."
"We need to start taking steps (towards ethical standards) with a sense of urgency," he said."
"Some two dozen high-ranking representatives of the global and Swiss economies, as well as scientists and academics, met in Geneva for the first Swiss Global Digital Summit aimed at seeking agreement on ethical guidelines to steer technological development...
Microsoft president Brad Smith insisted on the importance that "technology be guided by values, and that those values be translated into principles and that those principles be pursued by concrete steps."
"We are the first generation of people who have the power to build machines with the capability to make decisions that have in the past only been made by people," he told reporters.
He stressed the need for "transparency" and "accountability ... to ensure that the people who create technology, including at companies like the one I work for remain accountable to the public at large."
"We need to start taking steps (towards ethical standards) with a sense of urgency," he said."
MIT developed a course to teach tweens about the ethics of AI; Quartz, September 4, 2019
Jenny Anderson, Quartz; MIT developed a course to teach tweens about the ethics of AI
"This summer, Blakeley Payne, a graduate student at MIT, ran a week-long course on ethics in artificial intelligence for 10-14 year olds. In one exercise, she asked the group what they thought YouTube’s recommendation algorithm was used for.
“To get us to see more ads,” one student replied.
“These kids know way more than we give them credit for,” Payne said.
Payne created an open source, middle-school AI ethics curriculum
to make kids aware of how AI systems mediate their everyday lives, from
YouTube and Amazon’s Alexa to Google search and social media. By
starting early, she hopes the kids will become more conscious of how AI
is designed and how it can manipulate them. These lessons also help
prepare them for the jobs of the future, and potentially become AI
designers rather than just consumers."
Thursday, August 29, 2019
New Research Alliance Cements Split on AI Ethics; Inside Higher Ed, August 23, 2019
David Matthews, Inside Higher Ed;
New Research Alliance Cements Split on AI Ethics
"Germany, France and Japan have joined forces to fund research into “human-centered” artificial intelligence that aims to respect privacy and transparency, in the latest sign of a global split with the U.S. and China over the ethics of AI."
A Youth Camp Where No Issue Is Off Limits: Arts and crafts, water sports and roaring bonfires have been replaced by exercises in decision-making.; The New York Times, August 29, 2019
Audra D. S. Burch, The New York Times;
"Etgar 36 is a summer camp meets road trip, and campers are exposed to opposing arguments about hotly debated issues at a time when many Americans are not used to talking to people with whom they disagree. The arts and crafts, sports and roaring bonfires of traditional sleepaway summer camps have been replaced by cultural journeys and exercises in critical thinking and civic engagement.
For Billy Planer, the camp’s founder, arming young people with information and ideas is the best way to prepare them for the emerging challenges of the world. Perhaps more quickly than ever before, teenagers are pressured to take a side and have an opinion amid an unending sea of status updates on social media.
“Success for us is finding humanity in discussions with people who have opposing views,” Mr. Planer, 52, said. “We want our kids to ask questions” and “gut-check their own positions,” he said."
Arts and crafts, water sports and roaring bonfires have been replaced by exercises in decision-making.
"Etgar 36 is a summer camp meets road trip, and campers are exposed to opposing arguments about hotly debated issues at a time when many Americans are not used to talking to people with whom they disagree. The arts and crafts, sports and roaring bonfires of traditional sleepaway summer camps have been replaced by cultural journeys and exercises in critical thinking and civic engagement.
For Billy Planer, the camp’s founder, arming young people with information and ideas is the best way to prepare them for the emerging challenges of the world. Perhaps more quickly than ever before, teenagers are pressured to take a side and have an opinion amid an unending sea of status updates on social media.
“Success for us is finding humanity in discussions with people who have opposing views,” Mr. Planer, 52, said. “We want our kids to ask questions” and “gut-check their own positions,” he said."
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
What Sci-Fi Can Teach Computer Science About Ethics; Wired, 8/28/19
Gregory Barber, Wired; What Sci-Fi Can Teach Computer Science About Ethics
Schools are adding ethics classes to their computer-science curricula. The reading assignments: science fiction.
"By the time class is up, Burton, a scholar of religion by training, hopes to have made progress toward something intangible: defining the emotional stakes of technology.
That’s crucial, Burton says, because most of her students are programmers. At the University of Illinois-Chicago, where Burton teaches, every student in the computer science major is required to take her course, whose syllabus is packed with science fiction. The idea is to let students take a step back from their 24-hour hackathons and start to think, through narrative and character, about the products they’ll someday build and sell. “Stories are a good way to slow people down,” Burton says. Perhaps they can even help produce a more ethical engineer."
Schools are adding ethics classes to their computer-science curricula. The reading assignments: science fiction.
"By the time class is up, Burton, a scholar of religion by training, hopes to have made progress toward something intangible: defining the emotional stakes of technology.
That’s crucial, Burton says, because most of her students are programmers. At the University of Illinois-Chicago, where Burton teaches, every student in the computer science major is required to take her course, whose syllabus is packed with science fiction. The idea is to let students take a step back from their 24-hour hackathons and start to think, through narrative and character, about the products they’ll someday build and sell. “Stories are a good way to slow people down,” Burton says. Perhaps they can even help produce a more ethical engineer."
Thursday, July 25, 2019
Solving The Tech Industry's Ethics Problem Could Start In The Classroom; NPR, May 31, 2019
Zeninjor Enwemeka, NPR; Solving The Tech Industry's Ethics Problem Could Start In The Classroom
"Ethics is something the world's largest tech companies are being forced to reckon with. Facebook has been criticized for failing to quickly remove toxic content, including the livestream of the New Zealand mosque shooting. YouTube had to disable comments on videos of minors after pedophiles flocked to its platform.
Some companies have hired ethicists to help them spot some of these issues. But philosophy professor Abby Everett Jaques of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology says that's not enough. It's crucial for future engineers and computer scientists to understand the pitfalls of tech, she says. So she created a class at MIT called Ethics of Technology."
"Ethics is something the world's largest tech companies are being forced to reckon with. Facebook has been criticized for failing to quickly remove toxic content, including the livestream of the New Zealand mosque shooting. YouTube had to disable comments on videos of minors after pedophiles flocked to its platform.
Some companies have hired ethicists to help them spot some of these issues. But philosophy professor Abby Everett Jaques of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology says that's not enough. It's crucial for future engineers and computer scientists to understand the pitfalls of tech, she says. So she created a class at MIT called Ethics of Technology."
What Students Gain From Learning Ethics in School; KQED, May 24, 2019
Linda Flanagan, KQED; What Students Gain From Learning Ethics in School
"Children at Kent Place are introduced to ethics in fifth grade, during what would otherwise be a health and wellness class. Rezach engages the students in simple case studies and invites them to consider the various points of view. She also acquaints them with the concept of right vs. right—the idea that ethical dilemmas often involve a contest between valid but conflicting values. “It’s really, really, really elementary,” she said.
In middle and upper school, the training is more structured and challenging. At the core of this education is a simple framework for ethical decision-making that Rezach underscores with all her classes, and which is captured on a poster board inside school. Paired with this framework is a collection of values that students are encouraged to study and explore. The values and framework for decision-making are the foundation of their ethics training."
"Children at Kent Place are introduced to ethics in fifth grade, during what would otherwise be a health and wellness class. Rezach engages the students in simple case studies and invites them to consider the various points of view. She also acquaints them with the concept of right vs. right—the idea that ethical dilemmas often involve a contest between valid but conflicting values. “It’s really, really, really elementary,” she said.
In middle and upper school, the training is more structured and challenging. At the core of this education is a simple framework for ethical decision-making that Rezach underscores with all her classes, and which is captured on a poster board inside school. Paired with this framework is a collection of values that students are encouraged to study and explore. The values and framework for decision-making are the foundation of their ethics training."
Daniel Callahan, 88, Dies; Bioethics Pioneer Weighed ‘Human Finitude’; The New York Times, July 23, 2019
Katharine Q. Seelye, The New York Times; Daniel
Callahan, 88, Dies; Bioethics Pioneer Weighed ‘Human Finitude’
“The scope
of his interests was impressively wide, as the Hastings Center said in an
appreciation of him, “beginning with Catholic thought and proceeding to the
morality of abortion, the nature of the doctor-patient relationship, the
promise and peril of new technologies, the scourge of high health care costs,
the goals of medicine, the medical and social challenges of aging, dilemmas
raised by decision-making near the end of life, and the meaning of death.”...
Among his
most important books was “Setting Limits: Medical Goals in an Aging Society”
(1987), which argued for rationing the health care dollars spent on older
Americans.”…
“He urged
his peers and the public to look beyond narrow issues in law and medicine to
broader questions of what it means to live a worthwhile life,” Dr. Appel said
by email.”…
While at
Harvard, Mr. Callahan became disillusioned with philosophy, finding it
irrelevant to the real world. At one point, he wandered over to the Harvard
Divinity School to see if theology might suit him better. As he wrote in his
memoir, “In Search of the Good: A Life in Bioethics” (2012), he concluded that
theologians asked interesting questions but did not work with useful
methodologies, and that philosophers had useful methodologies but asked
uninteresting questions.”
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