Monday, January 6, 2014

Ethics in Information Technology

Ethics in Information Technology





                                    IT Professionals

      Profession is a calling that requires
     Specialized knowledge
     Long and intensive academic preparation

Is IT Workers Professionals?
      Partial list of IT specialists
     Programmers
     Systems analysts
     Software engineers
     Database administrators
     Local area network (LAN) administrators
     Chief information officers (CIOs)
      Legal perspective
     IT workers are not recognized as professionals
     Not licensed
     IT workers are not liable for malpractice

Professional Relationships That Must Be Managed
      IT professionals have many different relationships with:
    Employers
    Clients
    Suppliers
    Other professionals
    IT users
    Society at large



Relationships between IT Professionals and Employers
      IT professionals must set an example and enforce policies regarding the ethical use of IT
      Software piracy is the act of illegally making copies of software or enabling others to access software to which they are not entitled
      Software piracy is an area in which IT professionals can be tempted to violate laws and policies
      The Business Software Alliance (BSA) is a trade group that represents the world’s largest software and hardware manufacturers
    Its mission is to stop the unauthorized copying of software produced by its members




      Trade secret
    Information used in business
    Generally unknown to the public
    Company has taken strong measures to keep confidential
      Whistle-blowing
    Attracts attention to a negligent, illegal, unethical, abusive, or dangerous act that threatens the public interest



Relationships between IT Professionals and Clients

      IT professional provides
    Hardware, software, or services at a certain cost and within a given time frame
      Client provides
    Compensation
    Access to key contacts
    Work space

      Relationship is usually documented in contractual terms
      Ethical problems arise if a company recommends its own products and services to remedy problems they have detected
    A company is unable to provide full and accurate reporting of a project’s status



Legal Overview:
Fraud, Misrepresentation,
and Breach of Contract


      Fraud
     Crime of obtaining goods, services, or property through deception or trickery
     Fraud is proven in court

      Breach of contract
     One party fails to meet the terms of a contract

      IT projects are joint efforts in which vendors and customers work together
    Difficult to assign blame


Relationships between IT Professionals and Suppliers
      Develop good relationships with suppliers
     Deal fairly with them
     Do not make unreasonable demands






Bribery
-Providing money, property, or favors to someone in business or government to obtain a business advantage

Relationships between IT Professionals and Other Professionals
      Professionals owe each other adherence to a professions’ code of conduct
      Ethical problems between members of the IT profession
     Résumé inflation
     Inappropriate sharing of corporate information


Relationships Between IT Professionals and IT Users
      IT user is a person for whom a hardware or software product is designed
      IT professionals’ duty
     Understand users’ needs and capabilities
     Deliver products and services that best meet those needs
     Establish an environment that supports ethical behaviour by users


Relationships between IT Professionals and Society
      Actions of an IT professional can affect society

The Ethical Behaviour of IT Professionals
      Corporations are taking actions to ensure good business ethics among employees
Professional Codes of Ethics
      A professional code of ethics states the principles and core values that are essential to the work of a particular occupational group
      Main parts:
     Outlines what the professional organization aspires to become
     Lists rules and principles by which members of the organization are expected to abide
      Benefits for individual, profession, and society
     Improves ethical decision making
     Promotes high standards of practice and ethical behavior
     Enhances trust and respect from the general public
     Provides an evaluation benchmark
Professional Organization
      No universal code of ethics for IT professionals
      No single, formal organization of IT professionals has emerged as preeminent
      Most prominent organizations include:
     Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
     Association of Information Technology Professionals (AITP)
     Computer Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE-CS)
     Project Management Institute (PMI)
Certification
      Indicates a professional possesses a particular set of skills, knowledge, or abilities in the opinion of a certifying organization
      Can also apply to products
      Generally voluntary
      Carries no requirement to adhere to a code of ethics

      Vendor certifications
     Some certifications substantially improve IT workers’ salaries and career prospects
     Relevant for narrowly defined roles
      Or certain aspects of broader roles
     Require passing a written exam
     Workers are commonly recertified as newer technologies become available
      Industry association certifications
     Require a certain level of experience and a broader perspective than vendor certifications
     Lag in developing tests that cover new technologies




Government Licensing
      Generally administered at the state level in the United States
      Case for licensing IT professionals
     Encourage IT professionals to follow the highest standards of the profession
     Practice a code of ethics
     Violators would be punished
      Issues associated with government licensing of IT professionals
     There are few international or national licensing programs for IT professionals
     No universally accepted core body of knowledge
     Unclear who should manage content and administration of licensing exams
     No administrative body to accredit professional education programs
     No administrative body to assess and ensure competence of individual professionals

IT Professional Malpractice
      Negligence has been defined as not doing something that a reasonable man would do, or doing something that a reasonable man would not do
      Duty of care refers to the obligation to protect people against any unreasonable harm or risk
      Courts consistently reject attempts to sue individual parties for computer-related malpractice






IT Users
      Employees’ ethical use of IT is an area of growing concern



Common Ethical Issues for IT Users
      Software piracy
      Inappropriate use of computing resources
      Inappropriate sharing of information
     Private data
     Confidential information


Supporting the Ethical Practices of IT Users
      Policies that protect against abuses:
     Establish boundaries of acceptable and unacceptable behavior
     Enable management to punish violators

      Policy components include:
     Defining and limiting the appropriate use of IT resources
     Establishing guidelines for use of company software
     Structuring information systems to protect data and information
     Installing and maintaining a corporate firewall

Summary
      A professional from a legal standpoint
     Has passed the state licensing requirements
     Has earned the right to practice there
      IT professionals have many different relationships
     Each with its own set of ethical issues and potential problems
      Professional code of ethics
     States the principles and core values essential to the work of an occupational group
      Licensing and certification of IT professionals
     Many people feel that certification will increase the reliability and effectiveness of information systems
     Raises many issues
      IT-related professional organizations have developed a code of ethics
      IT usage policy defines appropriate and inappropriate IT user behavior


No comments:

Post a Comment