Gift of Fire, A: Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues for Computing Technology, 5th edition

Published by Pearson (February 27, 2017) © 2018

  • Sara Baase San Diego State University
  • Timothy M. Henry Rhode Island College

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Watch author Timothy Henry's webinar on engaging students in Computer Ethics.

For courses in Computer Ethics and Computers and Society.

An objective study of technology ethics that inspires critical thinking and debate

                                                                                                                                                                                               

In Gift of Fire, A: Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues for Computing Technology, Sara Baase presents a balanced exploration of the social, legal, philosophical, ethical, political, constitutional, and economic implications of computing and the controversies they raise. With an objective computer scientist's perspective, and with historical context for many issues, Baase covers the issues students will face both as members of a technological society and as professionals in computer-related fields. A primary goal is to develop computer professionals who understand the implications of what they create and how it fits into society at large. This text encourages students to think about the ethics and philosophical direction behind topics but doesn’t necessarily lead students to conclusions. The 5th Edition contains updated material on new topics and examples, outdated material has been removed, and several topics have been reorganized. New material appears throughout, including material on current trending topics such as drones and autonomous cars.

About the Book

Helps students see and understand the implications and impacts of technology                                                                                             

  • Focus on solutions to computer-related problems from technology and from markets, management, and law.
  • Discussion of how computers change established institutions and conventions.
  • Comparison of the risks and problems of computer technology with other technologies and non-computerized alternatives.
  • UPDATED! Each chapter now features new, expanded, or revised content.
  • Incorporates a problem-solving approach, beginning with a description of what is happening in a particular area, then a discussion of why there are concerns and what the new problems are, and finally some commentary or perspective and some current and potential solutions to the problems.
  • Historical background on many issues.
  • Analysis of ethical issues facing today's computer professionals.
  • Wide range of topics, including some not covered in similar texts.
  • Coverage of current issues and controversies, from multiple perspectives.
  • Many examples from real incidents and cases.
  • Roughly 350 exercises including review questions, essay questions, activities, and questions for class discussion.
    • NEW! More than 75 new exercises bring this edition up-to-date with current trends.
    • The extensive amount of exercises, many of which are based on real cases, provides a wealth of options for classroom discussion, term paper topics, and further study.
  • The Appendix features two professional codes of ethics for computer science professionals. Shaded "boxes" that describe examples, cases, or historical background.

About the Book

  • More than 75 new exercises bring this edition up-to-date with current trends.

Content Updates

Each chapter now features new, expanded, or revised content, including:

  • Chapter 1 contains a new section on self-driving cars and introduces the Internet of Things.
  • Chapter 2 covers new material on implanting tracking chips in people, national ID systems, extensive government surveillance programs made public by leaked NSA documents, new surveillance technologies, blocking online ads and ethical controversies about doing so, and the European Union’s “right to be forgotten.” A reorganized Section 2.3 includes more Fourth Amendment issues and significant court decisions about searching cellphones and tracking people by tracking their phones.
  • Chapter 3 contains more material on how companies handle objectionable content. This is supported with new controversial examples of recent leaks of sensitive material, and an expanded the discussion of net neutrality.
  • Chapter 4 includes new copyright cases in several countries related to news excerpts, as well as added court decision, updated and added patent cases, and arguments related to the the lawsuit against Google for copying millions of books.
  • Chapter 5 has been extensively reorganized and updated to include a case study (the Target breach) and many new examples throughout. Other new sections cover hacking methods and why the digital world, including the Internet of Things, is so vulnerable. The new section on security includes what cybersecurity professionals do, responsible disclosure, the role of users in security, and the controversy over impenetrable encryption and backdoors for law enforcement.
  • Chapter 6 has a large new section on the sharing economy and gig work.             
  • Chapter 7 features new sections on hurdles to expanding Internet access in poor and developing countries and on various issues about control of our devices and data. New examples and more discussion of biased and distorted information in cyberspace also features.
  • Chapter 8 includes an updated section on voting systems, a new section with a new case study (the HealthCare.gov website), added issues about software controls in cars, and additional discussion of the accidental bombing of a Doctors Without Borders hospital.         

Chapter 9 has a new discussion of the Volkswagen “defeat device” scandal, and updated scenarios.

Table of Contents

  1. Unwrapping the Gift
    • 1.1 The Pace of Change
    • 1.2 Change and Unexpected Developments
      • 1.2.1 Self-Driving Vehicles
      • 1.2.2 Connections: Mobile Phones, Social Networking, and the Internet of Things
      • 1.2.3 E-commerce and Free Stuff
      • 1.2.4 Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Sensors, and Motion
      • 1.2.5 Tools for Disabled People
    • 1.3 Themes
    • 1.4 Ethics
      • 1.4.1 What is Ethics, Anyway?
      • 1.4.2 A Variety of Ethical Views
      • 1.4.3 Some Important Distinctions
  2. Privacy
    • 2.1 Privacy Risks and Principles
      • 2.1.1 What Is Privacy?
      • 2.1.2 New Technology, New Risks
      • 2.1.3 Terminology and Principles for Managing Personal Data
    • 2.2 The Business and Social Sectors
      • 2.2.1 Marketing and Personalization
      • 2.2.2 Our Social and Personal Activity
      • 2.2.3 Location Tracking
      • 2.2.4 A Right to Be Forgotten
    • 2.3 The Fourth Amendment and Changing Technology
      • 2.3.1 The Fourth Amendment
      • 2.3.2 Background, Law, and Court Decisions
      • 2.3.3 Applying the Fourth Amendment in New Areas
    • 2.4 Government Systems
      • 2.4.1 Video Surveillance and Face Recognition
      • 2.4.2 Databases
      • 2.4.3 Public Records: Access versus Privacy
      • 2.4.4 National ID Systems
      • 2.4.5 The NSA and Secret Intelligence Gathering
    • 2.5 Protecting Privacy: Technology and Markets
      • 2.5.1 Developing Privacy Tools
      • 2.5.2 Encryption
      • 2.5.3 Blocking Ads
      • 2.5.4 Policies for Protecting Personal Data
    • 2.6 Protecting Privacy: Theory, Rights, and Laws
      • 2.6.1 A Right to Privacy
      • 2.6.2 Law and Regulation
      • 2.6.3 Contrasting Viewpoints
    • 2.7 Privacy Regulations in the European Union
  3. Freedom of Speech
    • 3.1 The First Amendment and Communications Paradigms
      • 3.1.1 Free Speech Principles
      • 3.1.2 Regulating Communications Media
    • 3.2 Controlling Speech in Cyberspace
      • 3.2.1 What Is O ensive Speech? What Is Illegal?
      • 3.2.2 Censorship Laws and Alternatives
      • 3.2.3 Child Pornography and Sexting
      • 3.2.4 Spam
      • 3.2.5 Challenging Old Regulatory Structures and Special Interests
    • 3.3 Decisions about Legal but Objectionable Content
    • 3.4 Leaking Sensitive Material
    • 3.5 Anonymity
    • 3.6 The Global Net: Censorship and Political Freedom
      • 3.6.1 Tools for Communication, Tools for Oppression
      • 3.6.2 Aiding Foreign Censors and Repressive Regimes
      • 3.6.3 Shutting Down Communications in Free Countries
    • 3.7 Net Neutrality: Regulations or the Market?
  4. Intellectual Property
    • 4.1 Principles and Laws
      • 4.1.1 What Is Intellectual Property?
      • 4.1.2 Challenges of New Technologies
      • 4.1.3 A Bit of History
      • 4.1.4 The Fair Use Doctrine
      • 4.1.5 Ethical Arguments About Copying
    • 4.2 Signi cant Fair Use Cases and Precedents
      • 4.2.1 Sony v. Universal City Studios (1984)
      • 4.2.2 Reverse Engineering: Game Machines
      • 4.2.3 Sharing Music: The Napster and Grokster Cases
      • 4.2.4 User and Programmer Interfaces
    • 4.3 Responses to Copyright Infringement
      • 4.3.1 Defensive and Aggressive Responses from the Content Industries
      • 4.3.2 The Digital Millennium Copyright Act: Anti Circumvention
      • 4.3.3 The Digital Millennium Copyright Act: Safe Harbor
      • 4.3.4 Evolving Business Models
    • 4.4 Search Engines and Online Libraries
    • 4.5 Free Software
      • 4.5.1 What Is Free Software?
      • 4.5.2 Should All Software Be Free?
    • 4.6 Patents for Software Inventions
      • 4.6.1 Patent Trends, Confusion, and Controversies
      • 4.6.2 To Patent or Not?
  5. Crime and Security
    • 5.1 Introduction
    • 5.2 What is Hacking?
      • 5.2.1 The Evolution of Hacking
      • 5.2.2 Hacker Tools
      • 5.2.3 Is “Harmless” Hacking Harmless?
    • 5.3 Some Speci c Applications of Hacking
      • 5.3.1 Identity Theft
      • 5.3.2 Case Study: The Target Breach
      • 5.3.3 Hacktivism, or Political Hacking
      • 5.3.4 Hacking by Governments
    • 5.4 Why Is the Digital World So Vulnerable?
      • 5.4.1 Vulnerability of Operating Systems and the Internet
      • 5.4.2 Human Nature, Markets, and Vulnerability of the Internet of Things
    • 5.5 Security
      • 5.5.1 Tools to Help Protect the Digital World
      • 5.5.2 People Who Can Help Protect the Digital World
      • 5.5.3 Hacking to Improve Security
      • 5.5.4 Backdoors for Law Enforcement
    • 5.6 The Law
      • 5.6.1 The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
      • 5.6.2 Criminalize Virus Writing and Hacker Tools?
      • 5.6.3 Penalties for Young Hackers
    • 5.7 Whose Laws Rule the Web?
      • 5.7.1 A Crime in One Country but Not Another
      • 5.7.2 Libel and Freedom of Speech
      • 5.7.3 Culture, Law, and Ethics
      • 5.7.4 Potential Solutions
  6. Work
    • 6.1 Fears and Questions
    • 6.2 Impacts on Employment
      • 6.2.1 Job Destruction and Creation
      • 6.2.2 Changing Skills and Skill Levels
      • 6.2.3 Are We Earning Less and Working More?
    • 6.3 Changing Work Patterns: From Telecommuting to Gigs
      • 6.3.1 Telecommuting
      • 6.3.2 The Sharing Economy, On-Demand Services, and GIG Work
    • 6.4 A Global Workforce
    • 6.5 Employee Communication and Monitoring by Employers
      • 6.5.1 Social Media Content
      • 6.5.2 Separating–or Merging–Work and Personal Systems
      • 6.5.3 Monitoring Employer Systems and Tracking Employees
  7. Evaluating and Controlling Technology
    • 7.1 Evaluating Information
      • 7.1.1 The Need for Responsible Judgment
      • 7.1.2 Computer Models
    • 7.2 Neo-Luddite Views of Computers, Technology, and Quality of Life
      • 7.2.1 Criticisms of Computing Technologies
      • 7.2.2 Views of Economics, Nature, and Human Needs
    • 7.3 Digital Divides
      • 7.3.1 Trends in Access in the United States
      • 7.3.2 Reaching the Next Billion Users
    • 7.4 Control of Our Devices and Data
      • 7.4.1 Remote Deletion of Software and Data
      • 7.4.2 Automatic Software Upgrades
    • 7.5 Making Decisions About Technology
      • 7.5.1 Questions
      • 7.5.2 The Di culty of Prediction
      • 7.5.3 Intelligent Machines and Super-intelligent Humans–Or the End of the Human Race?
      • 7.5.4 A Few Observations
  8. Errors, Failures, and Risks
    • 8.1 Failures and Errors in Computer Systems
      • 8.1.1 An Overview
      • 8.1.2 Problems For Individuals
      • 8.1.3 System Failures
      • 8.1.4 Example: Stalled Airports at Denver, Hong Kong, and Malaysia
      • 8.1.5 Example: HealthCare.gov
      • 8.1.6 What Goes Wrong?
      • 8.1.7 Problems For Individuals
    • 8.2 Case Study:The Therac-25
      • 8.2.1 Therac-25 Radiation Overdoses
      • 8.2.2 Software and Design Problems
      • 8.2.3 Why So Many Incidents?
      • 8.2.4 Observations and Perspective
    • 8.3 Increasing Reliability and Safety
      • 8.3.1 Professional Techniques
      • 8.3.2 Trust the Human or the Computer System?
      • 8.3.3 Law, Regulation, and Markets
    • 8.4 Dependence, Risk, and Progress
      • 8.4.1 Are We Too Dependent on Computers?
      • 8.4.2 Risk and Progress
  9. Professional Ethics and Responsibilities
    • 9.1 What Is “Professional Ethics”?
    • 9.2 Ethical Guidelines for Computer Professionals
      • 9.2.1 Special Aspects of Professional Ethics
      • 9.2.2 Professional Codes of Ethics
      • 9.2.3 Guidelines and Professional Responsibilities
    • 9.3 Scenarios
      • 9.3.1 Introduction and Methodology
      • 9.3.2 Protecting Personal Data
      • 9.3.3 Designing an Application with Targeted Ads
      • 9.3.4 Webcams in School Laptops
      • 9.3.5 Publishing Security Vulnerabilities
      • 9.3.6 Specifications
      • 9.3.7 Schedule Pressures
      • 9.3.8 Software License Violation
      • 9.3.9 Going Public with Safety Concerns
      • 9.3.10 Release of Personal Information
      • 9.3.11 Conflict of Interest
      • 9.3.12 Kickbacks and Disclosure
      • 9.3.13 A Test Plan
      • 9.3.14 Artificial Intelligence and Sentencing Criminals
      • 9.3.15 A Gracious Host

Epilogue

The Software Engineering Code and the ACM Code

A.1. Software Engineering Code of Ethics and Professional Practice

A.2. ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct

Index

Sara Baase is Professor Emeritus with the Department of Computer Science, San Diego State University, where she won awards for outstanding teaching. Her textbooks in computer science have been translated into several languages. Dr. Baase received her doctoral degree from the University of California, Berkeley.

Timothy M. Henry has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mathematics from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, a Master of Science Degree in Computer Science from Old Dominion University, and was awarded a PhD in Applied Math Sciences from the University of Rhode Island. He began his IT career as an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard, and among his early tours, he was the Information Resources Manager (what is today a CIO) at the Coast Guard's training center in Yorktown, VA. Dr. Henry then switched over to education and taught mathematics and computer science courses at the U. S. Coast Guard Academy. As his time there ended, he was offered a great opportunity to work with 'bleeding-edge' technology in a research and development environment and oversaw projects for law enforcement, first responders, healthcare, and education. For the next decade he continued to work as a project manager on large corporate- or state-wide information systems. During that time, he obtained his Project Management Professional (PMP) certification.

He then returned to a university setting where he has been teaching ethics, programming, cybersecurity, and project management for over 15 years. He now serves as IT Graduate Director at the New England Institute of Technology.

In addition to co-authoring A Gift of Fire: Social, Legal and Ethical Issues for Computing Technology with Sara Baase, he has co-authored two data structure textbooks with Frank Carrano, Data Structures and Abstractions with Java and Data Abstractions and Problem Solving in C++: Walls & Mirrors, which won the 2016 McGuffey Longevity Award from the Textbook and Academy Authors Association.

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