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         Computer Ethics:     more books (100)
  1. Computer Ethics: Cautionary Tales and Ethical Dilemmas in Computing by Tom Forrester, Perry Morrison, 1992-01-01
  2. Computer and Information Ethics (Contributions to the Study of Computer Science) by John Weckert, Douglas Adeney, 1997-05-30
  3. Microcomputers in Education Conference: Ethics and Excellence in Computer Education : Choice or Mandate (Sixth Annual)
  4. Business Computer Ethics by Duncan Langford, 1999-04-27
  5. Computer Ethics: A Guide for a New Age by Douglas W. Johnson, 1984-03
  6. Computer Ethics (The International Library of Essays in Public and Professional Ethics)
  7. Case Studies in Information and Computer Ethics by Richard A. Spinello, 1996-06-26
  8. Ethics and the Management of Computer Technology (National Conference on Business Ethics//Proceedings) by National Conference on Business Ethics (4th : 1981 : Bentley College), 1982-10
  9. Computer Ethics - 4th Edition by Dborah GJohnson, 2008
  10. Cyberethics: Social & Moral Issues in the Computer Age (Contemporary Issues (Prometheus)) by Robert M. Baird, 2000-04
  11. IT Ethics Handbook: Right and Wrong for IT Professionals by Stephen Northcutt, Cynthia Madden, 2004-07-29
  12. Morality And Machines: Perspectives On Computer Ethics by Stacey L Edgar, 2002-05-01
  13. Computer and Information Ethics by Marsha Woodbury, 2003-01
  14. Ethics and Values in Applied Social Research (Applied Social Research Methods)

21. Ethics? Right Vs. Wrong
Understanding Intellectual and Creative Property Rights. Directions Answer each of the questions after reading the article below. No questions can go unanswered.
http://www.crews.org/curriculum/ex/compsci/articles/ethics.htm
Home Viruses Computers The Internet Ethics Pt.1 Ethics Pt.2 How Computers Work History Pt.1 History Pt2 Written by R. Hames Understanding Intellectual and Creative Property Rights Directions: Answer each of the questions after reading the article below. No questions can go unanswered. Press the button at the bottom when you have finished. Full Name : Conn#: 8- A B E thics is the question of right and wrong. We are taught from a young age that plagiarism (copying other's work) is wrong. One might say, it is like cheating on a test when you burn a CD copy of someone else's music or game. However, most people don't associate copying of songs, games, videos, etc. as being wrong. Just because it is easy and hard to get caught does not make it right. The rights of the creator must be protected if we are going to be a society that is creative and inventive. 1. How are plagiarism and copying music/game files alike?
D id you know that there are federal rules that congress has passed to regulate and penalize those who violate these rules? Not only could you pay large fines if caught but you could also serve jail time Fines Jail Time both L ets see this as a personal issue.

22. Computer Ethics | Computer Ethics Information | HighBeam Research - FREE Trial
Computer Ethics Research Computer Ethics articles at HighBeam.com. Find information, facts and related newspaper, magazine and journal articles in our online encyclopedia.
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3405300101.html
Research articles and archives from 6,500+ publications
Please enter a keyword above. Articles Reference Encyclopedias, Almanacs, Transcripts, and Maps Gale Encyclopedia of E-Commerce entries
Encyclopedia entry: Computer Ethics
Article from:
Gale Encyclopedia of E-Commerce
Article date:
January 1, 2002
Customer Support
Related articles
COMPUTER ETHICS
Computer ethics refers to the ways in which ethical traditions and norms are tested, applied, stretched, negotiated, and broken in the realm of computer technology. As computers brought about dramatically enhanced power of communication and data manipulation, new ethical questions and controversies were forced to the forefront of contemporary ethics debates. While ethics is concerned with codes of behavior, the arena of computer technology has created many uncertainties that make the establishment of such clear codes an often daunting task. The more dramatic abuses of computer technology, such as major Internet hackings of company Web sites and online theft of credit card numbers, achieve a high profile. While there are few uncertainties about such cases, these are only the most visible examples of far more prevalent phenomena. Most cases are more subtle, frequent, and tied to the everyday workings of ordinary, law-abiding citizens. There are few clear rules to govern ethical computer behavior, and novel situations arise with great frequency, which can prove dangerous when these fields and practices are mixed with business and sensitive information.

23. Cyberethics
Bibliography (1996), archived at the Mississippi State University, College of Business and Industry.
http://cyberethics.cbi.msstate.edu/biblio/complete.htm
writeside('Cyberethics', 'David Vance', 'Mississippi State University', 'http://www.cbi.msstate.edu'); writebottom('David Vance', 'dvance@cobilan.msstate.edu');
PREFACE TO THE BIBLIOGRAPHY
Editor: Herman Tavani Maintained by: David Vance CPSR
Introduction
Bibliography Main Page ... I.S.Ethics Main Page Preface
SECTION I: GENERAL REFERENCES
SECTION II: TEACHING COURSES IN COMPUTERS, ETHICS AND SOCIETY
2 Ethical Theory: A Framework For Teaching Computer Ethics Courses ...
SECTION VII: WHAT'S NEW: AN UPDATE

24. Computer Ethics - Lecture 10
Computer Ethics. Ethics deals with placing a “ value ” on acts according to whether they are “ good ” or “ bad ”. Every society has its rules about whether certain
http://www.cmpe.boun.edu.tr/~say/c150/intro/lit10.html
Computer Ethics Ethics value good bad When computers first began to be used in society at large, the absence of ethical standards about their use and related issues caused some problems. However, as their use became widespread in every facet of our lives, discussions in computer ethics resulted in some kind of a consensus. Today, many of these rules have been formulated as laws, either national or international. Computer crimes and computer fraud are now common terms. There are laws against them, and everyone is responsible for knowing what constitutes computer crime and computer fraud. The Ten Commandments of computer ethics have been defined by the Computer Ethics Institute . Here is our interpretation of them: 1) Thou shalt not use a computer to harm other people: 2) Thou shalt not interfere with other people's computer work: Computer viruses 3) Thou shalt not snoop around in other people's files: encryption 4) Thou shalt not use a computer to steal: Using a computer to break into the accounts of a company or a bank and transferring money should be judged the same way as robbery. It is illegal and there are strict laws against it. 5) Thou shalt not use a computer to bear false witness: The Internet can spread untruth as fast as it can spread truth. Putting out false "information" to the world is bad. For instance, spreading false rumors about a person or false propaganda about historical events is wrong.

25. Computer Ethics Institute
Over the years, the Computer Ethics Institute has held many events focusing on a particular issue within the field of computer ethics. Since technology changes rapidly, our
http://computerethicsinstitute.org/events.html

26. James H. Moor. What Is Computer Ethics?
Southern Connecticut State University, Research Center on Computing and Society. 4 Parts. A Proposed Definition. The Revolutionary Machine. Anatomy of the Computer Revolution. The Invisibility Factor. First appeared in Terrell Ward Bynum, ed., Computers and Ethics, Blackwell, 1985.
http://www.southernct.edu/organizations/rccs/resources/teaching/teaching_mono/mo

27. Ten Commandments For Computer Ethics By CEI
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR COMPUTER ETHICS Courtesy of the Computer Ethics Institute
http://www.tekmom.com/tencommand/index.html
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR COMPUTER ETHICS Courtesy of the Computer Ethics Institute
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR COMPUTER ETHICS Thou shalt not use a computer to harm other people. Thou shalt not interfere with other people's computer work. Thou shalt not snoop around in other people's files. Thou shalt not use a computer to steal. Thou shalt not use a computer to bear false witness. Thou shalt not use or copy software for which you have not paid. Thou shalt not use other people's computer resources without authorization. Thou shalt not appropriate other people's intellectual output. Thou shalt think about the social consequences of the program you write. Thou shalt use a computer in ways that show consideration and respect. Published (and reformatted) with the permission of Dr. Ramon Barquin,
President of the Computer Ethics Institute
You may link to this page, but you may not copy the HTML to use on another website. See No. 8. :-)

28. Computer Ethics
This website provides a webcentered learning environment for my 6th grade students.
http://www.catawba.k12.nc.us/pages/sites/edwebsites/computerskills/quizzes/ethic

29. IN SEARCH OF A COMMON RATIONALE FOR COMPUTER ETHICS
University of Notre Dame. Paper presented in the Third Annual Computer Ethics Institute Conference, The Brookings Institution, Washington, DC, 1994.
http://www.nd.edu/~rbarger/common-rat.html
methodology , but they provide no absolutes which can serve as a basis that

30. Computer Ethics Definition
The definition of Computer Ethics defined and explained in simple language.
http://www.techterms.com/definition/computerethics

31. Computer Ethics Ebook
Computer Ethics ebook plus Reference Social Aspects. Barger, Robert N. Download ebooks in Adobe, Mobipocket, MS Reader and eReader
http://www.diesel-ebooks.com/cgi-bin/item/051140641X/Computer-Ethics-eBook.html

32. CPSR - Computer Professionals For Social Responsibility
Activism for civil liberties in issues such as internet censorship, internet governance, malicious interference.
http://cpsr.org
@import url(/cpsr_global.css); @import url(cpsr_home.css); @import url(/ploneCustom.css); @import url(/cpsr_print.css); Skip to content.
CPSR
Sections Personal tools
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
Liberating Voices Book Now Available!
Liberating Voices: A Pattern Language for Communication Revolution , the book on the information and communication pattern language project that was launched at CPSR's 2002 Shaping the Network Society conference (DIAC-2002), is finally available (From Powells Books , and other online and offline sources). Liberating Voices brings together ideas and suggestions from a variety of perspectives including activism and social change, education, community informatics, governance, media, development, information science, economics, journalism, arts and culture. It can be used by researchers, by practitioners in a variety of fields including teachers in the classroom, by activists, and by citizens and community members throughout the world. This book is particularly relevant at this moment in history. It's a call for social change based on a peaceful revolution in grassroots information and communication. Inspired by the vision and framework outlined in Christopher Alexander's classic 1977 book

33. Computer Ethics: 1.1 - Introduction To Computer Ethics
1.1 Introduction To Computer Ethics next section. previous section interactive activity. table of contents. return to home. related links. post your thoughts
http://library.thinkquest.org/26658/cgi-bin/1-1.cgi
Introduction To Computer Ethics next section previous section interactive activity table of contents return to home related links post your thoughts The introduction of the World Wide Web in 1990 has catalyzed the expansion of the Internet, which is still growing today at unprecedented rates. The recent growth of the Internet has resulted not only in an increase in the amount of available knowledge, but in an increase in the problems inherent to its usage and distribution. It has become clear that traditional rules of conduct are not always applicable to this new medium, so new ethical codes are now being developed. Ethics , in the classical sense, refers to the rules and standards governing the conduct of an individual with others. As technology and computers became more and more a part of our everyday lives, we must understand that the problems that have always plagued business and conduct will continue to be a problem. In fact, a new medium can provide even more difficult questions of judgement. In other words, since the introduction of the World Wide Web, the definition of ethics has evolved, too. A new type of ethics known as computer ethics has emerged. Computer ethics

34. International Charter - Business Ethics And Certification
International business organization that encourages business ethics and best practice policies.
http://www.icharter.org

35. Computer Ethics | Define Computer Ethics At Dictionary.com
Computing Dictionary computer ethics definition philosophy Ethics is the field of study that is concerned with questions of value, that is, judgments about what human
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/computer ethics

36. NetFuture: Science, Technology, And Human Responsibility
Electronic newsletter. Archives available.
http://www.netfuture.org/
NETFUTURE
Science, Technology, and Human Responsibility

A Publication of The Nature Institute
Editor: Steve Talbott (stevet@netfuture.org)
NetFuture is an electronic newsletter with periodic postings. It is currently going through a bit of a transition - from its earlier focus on technologies to a preoccupation with the deeper issues rooted in our technology-centered, scientific vision of the world. Above all, it seeks a new, qualitative science. Quote of the Month
Cooperativity is fundamental ... There is no dictator in cell regulation, no first among equals, no master regulator, no top-down system of governance. (Toby J. Gibson, molecular biologist) In one sense, this quest could hardly be more radical: from Galileo's time onward, the dominant science has tried to ignore qualities in favor of quantities - in other words, to define qualitative science as non-science. But in fact the only science we can have is irreducibly qualitative, which is why all true scientists continually appeal to qualities - even if they prefer not to notice the fact. The task at hand is not so much to create something new as to become conscious of what goes on in science all the time - and learn to discipline it - thereby avoiding the crippling distortions that result from the effort to evade reality's fullness. Of course, this would already be to create something new. The NetFuture archives contain a vast range of commentary on many aspects of technology and its social impacts. You will find convenient access to all these contents via the

37. Computer Ethics Definition By Babylon's Free Dictionary
Definition of Computer ethics computer ethics ethics is the field of study that is concerned with questions of value, that is, judgments about what human behaviour is good
http://dictionary.babylon.com/computer ethics/

38. Science And Technology Ethics Resources On World Wide Web
Applied ethics directory for science and technology.
http://www.ethicsweb.ca/resources/sci-tech/

Publications

Ethicsweb.ca
is administered by Chris MacDonald chrismac@ethicsweb.ca
"Applied Ethics Resources on WWW" was developed, funded, and maintained for nearly a decade as a project of the
W. Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics

39. Computer Ethics: Basic Concepts And Historical Overview
Computer Ethics Basic Concepts and Historical Overview First published Tue 14 Aug, 2001 Computer ethics is a new branch of ethics that is growing and changing rapidly as
http://dehn.slu.edu/courses/fall06/493/ComputerEthics.html
Computer Ethics: Basic Concepts and Historical Overview
First published Tue 14 Aug, 2001
Computer ethics is a new branch of ethics that is growing and changing rapidly as computer technology also grows and develops. The term "computer ethics" is open to interpretations both broad and narrow. On the one hand, for example, computer ethics might be understood very narrowly as the efforts of professional philosophers to apply traditional ethical theories like utilitarianism, Kantianism, or virtue ethics to issues regarding the use of computer technology. On the other hand, it is possible to construe computer ethics in a very broad way to include, as well, standards of professional practice, codes of conduct, aspects of computer law, public policy, corporate ethicseven certain topics in the sociology and psychology of computing. In the industrialized nations of the world, the "information revolution" already has significantly altered many aspects of life in banking and commerce, work and employment, medical care, national defense, transportation and entertainment. Consequently, information technology has begun to affect (in both good and bad ways) community life, family life, human relationships, education, freedom, democracy, and so on (to name a few examples). Computer ethics in the broadest sense can be understood as that branch of applied ethics which studies and analyzes such social and ethical impacts of information technology. In recent years, this robust new field has led to new university courses, conferences, workshops, professional organizations, curriculum materials, books, articles, journals, and research centers. And in the age of the world-wide-web, computer ethics is quickly being transformed into "global information ethics".

40. CCSR: Home Page
Co-organizers of computer ethics conferences (EthiComp) and providers of social-impact advising to government and other groups. News. Resources. Discussions. Conferences listings.
http://www.ccsr.cse.dmu.ac.uk/
A ddressing the social and ethical impacts of information and communication technologies through research, consultancy and education.
CCSR: Preview
ETHICOMP 2011
Venue: Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Date: Wednesday 14 September to Friday 16 September 2011
ETHICOMP
Latest Ethicol
IS IT Ethical? The 2010 Report by Simon Rogerson for IMIS
Latest Conference
More latest conferences...
Latest Resources
More latest resources...
Multimedia
A brief overview of the issues related to using emerging technologies and how these might be resolved. For more information contact: ccsr (at) dmu.ac.uk or go to: CCSR Website "Our ICT-dependent Society".

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