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Ethicia and social issues in Information system
Ethicia and social issues in Information system
bijaypant2
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Jul 15, 2024
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About This Presentation
COMPUTER 04 MIS
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523.32 KB
Language:
en
Added:
Jul 15, 2024
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13 pages
Slide Content
Slide 1
4.1 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
4Chapter
Ethical and Social
Issues in Information
Systems
Slide 2
4.2 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
•Analyze the relationships among ethical, social, and
political issues that are raised by information
systems.
•Identify the main moral dimensions of an information
society and specific principles for conduct that can be
used to guide ethical decisions.
•Evaluate the impact of contemporary information
systems and the Internet on the protection of
individual privacy and intellectual property.
•Assess how information systems have affected
everyday life.
Slide 3
4.3 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
Does Location Tracking Threaten Privacy?
•Problem:New opportunities from new technology and
need for greater security.
•Solutions: Redesigning business processes and
products to support location monitoringincreases sales
and security.
•Deploying GPS and RFID tracking devices with a location
tracking databaseenables location monitoring.
•Demonstrates IT’s role in creating new opportunities for
improved business performance
•Illustrates how technology can be a double-edged sword
by providing benefits such as increased sales and
security while compromising privacy.
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 4
4.4 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
Understanding Ethical and Social Issues Related to Systems
•A model for thinking about ethical, social, and political
issues
•Five moral dimensions of the information age
•Information rights and obligations
•Property rights and obligations
•Accountability and control
•System quality
•Quality of life
•Key technology trends that raise ethical issues
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 5
4.5 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
The Relationship Between Ethical, Social, and
Political Issues in an Information Society
Figure 4-1
The introduction of new information technology has a
ripple effect, raising new ethical, social, and political issues
that must be dealt with on the individual, social, and
political levels. These issues have five moral dimensions:
information rights and obligations, property rights and
obligations, system quality, quality of life, and
accountability and control.
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Understanding Ethical and Social Issues Related to Systems
Slide 6
4.6 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Understanding Ethical and Social Issues Related to Systems
•Read the Interactive Session: Management, and then
discuss the following questions:
•Do data brokers pose an ethical dilemma? Explain your
answer.
•What are the problems caused by the proliferation of data
brokers? What management, organization, and technology
factors are responsible for these problems?
•How effective are existing solutions to these problems?
•Should the U.S. federal government regulate private data
brokers? Why or why not? What are the advantages and
disadvantages?
Data for Sale
Slide 7
4.7 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
•Basic concepts: responsibility, accountability,
reliability
•Ethical analysis
•Candidate ethical principles
•Professional codes of conduct
•Some real-world ethical dilemmas
Ethics in an Information Society
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 8
4.8 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
•Information rights: Privacy and freedom in the
Internet Age
•The European directive on data protection
•Internet challenges to privacy
•Technical solutions
•Property rights: Intellectual property
•Trade secrets
•Copyright
•Patents
•Challenges to intellectual property rights
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 9
4.9 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
How Cookies Identify Web Visitors
Figure 4-3
Cookies are written by a Web site on a visitor’s hard drive. When the visitor returns to that Web site, the Web server
requests the ID number from the cookie and uses it to access the data stored by that server on that visitor. The Web
site can then use these data to display personalized information.
Slide 10
4.10 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
•Accountability, liability, and control
•Computer-related liability problems
•System quality: Data quality and system errors
•Quality of life: Equity, access, and boundaries
•Balancing power: Center versus periphery
•Rapidity of change: Reduced response time to competition
•Maintaining boundaries: Family, work, and leisure
•Dependence and vulnerability
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 11
4.11 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
•Quality of life: Equity, access, and boundaries (cont’d)
•Computer crime and abuse
•Employment: Trickle-down technology and reengineering
job loss
•Equity and access: Increasing racial and social class
cleavages
•Health risks: RSI repetitive stress injury, CVS
Computer vision syndrome, and Technostress
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Slide 12
4.12 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
The Spamming Problem
Figure 4-5
This figure shows the major types of products and services hawked through spam e-mail
messages and the industries that receive the most spam.
Slide 13
4.13 ©2007 by Prentice Hall
•Read the Interactive Session: Organizations, and then
discuss the following questions:
•Does use of the Internet by children and teenagers pose an
ethical dilemma? Why or why not?
•Should parents restrict use of the Internet by children or
teenagers? Why or why not?
The Internet: Friend or Foe to Children?
Management Information Systems
Chapter 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
The Moral Dimensions of Information Systems
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