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3 votes
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On the engineer's responsibility in protecting privacy (Paul Baran, RAND, 1968)
10 votes -
On the future computer era modification of the American character and the role of the engineer, or, a little caution in the haste to number (1968)
7 votes -
ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct has been updated!
5 votes -
When you have a serious hereditary disease, who has a right to know?
4 votes -
What, if anything, makes a morally good war?
I've been consuming the darkness that is wartime histories from the past three or four centuries and I feel like I've encountered a lot of people who had what they believed to be justifiable...
I've been consuming the darkness that is wartime histories from the past three or four centuries and I feel like I've encountered a lot of people who had what they believed to be justifiable reasons to launch wars against other powers. There are people who thought they had divine right to a particular position of power and so would launch a war to assert that god-given right. There are people who believed in a citizen's right to have some (any) say in how their tax money gets used in government and so would fight wars over that. People would fight wars to, as John Cleese once said, "Keep China British." Many wars are started to save the honor of a country/nation. Some are started in what is claimed to be self-defense and later turns out to have been a political play instigated to end what has been a political thorn in their sides.
In all this time, I've struggled to really justify many of these wars, but some of that comes with the knowledge of what other wars have cost in terms of human carnage and suffering. For some societies in some periods, the military is one of the few vehicles to social mobility (and I think tend to think social mobility is grease that keeps a society functioning). Often these conflicts come down to one man's penis and the inability to swallow their pride to find a workable solution unless at the end of a bayonet. These conflicts also come with the winning powers taking the opportunity to rid themselves of political threats and exacting new harms on the defeated powers (which comes back around again the next time people see each other in a conflict).
So help keep me from embracing a totally pacifistic approach to war. When is a war justifiable? When it is not only morally acceptable but a moral imperative to go to war? Please point to examples throughout history where these situations have happened, if you can (though if you're prepared to admit that there has been no justifiable war that you're aware of, I suppose that's fine if bitter).
20 votes -
Beauteous beasts - Humans have been breeding animals for beauty for centuries. But should we draw the line at genetically modified pets?
4 votes -
Driverless cars could make our roads safer and reduce congestion. But the algorithms driving them will also have to make life-or-death decisions.
10 votes -
Excitement and problematic developments in development
3 votes -
'Three parent baby' IVF technique on track to become legal in Australia
8 votes -
Do you think "incivility" can be used as a tool for positive change?
I have been reading a lot of the articles on uncivility. A big complaint is politicians don't like the power it gives people. Which I understand can be bad, but it also seems like for the first...
I have been reading a lot of the articles on uncivility. A big complaint is politicians don't like the power it gives people. Which I understand can be bad, but it also seems like for the first time in a long time, the average person has a way to impact these high powered politicians. Ordinarily there is nothing we can do, we can't touch them when they continually do things not in the best interest of the people they represent. They do shady things, and we have to go with it.
They are arguing uncivility is dangerous because it creates the problem of officials being scared to make decisions based on how they will be impacted. If a judge rules one way, and the masses start making his life hard, they say it isn't really fair to the judge. Which makes sense.
This is the information age. We have access to so much more going on than adults did before us. We actually have platforms to be heard on a large scale. Which means pressuring these people to do right through "uncivility" could be harnessed and used positively to enforce change. If the people making these decisions that are not in our best interest have something to lose, maybe they will finally start doing right by us.
What are your thoughts on this aspect of the uncivility debate going on right now?
16 votes -
When should a tech company refuse to build tools for the government?
9 votes -
Apple, Google and Silicon Valley love to say they're ethical. But what do they really mean?
8 votes -
Ellen Pao - The perverse incentives that help incels thrive in tech
29 votes -
Toowoomba woman wins court bid to use her dead boyfriend's sperm to have a baby
8 votes -
YouTube begins issuing strikes to channels that advertise their Twitch counterparts
@linustech: Basically they are mad we are publicizing our stream on Twitch. Yet another move towards YouTube owning the audience rather than the creators having control of that relationship. To be clear these guidelines have existed for a long time. The enforcement is new.
20 votes -
NIH ends alcohol study, citing funding, credibility problems
3 votes -
AI ethics: How far should companies go to retain employees?
5 votes -
Big Tech firms march to the beat of Pentagon, CIA despite dissension
4 votes -
Arkady Babchenko: Ukraine says it found hit list of 47 people after staging murder
8 votes -
Do companies have an ethical (not legal) obligation to disclose how they track employees?
Companies can technically and legally track just about everything you do at work digitally, from your entire browser history to even particular usage patterns on company web apps. Should there be...
Companies can technically and legally track just about everything you do at work digitally, from your entire browser history to even particular usage patterns on company web apps. Should there be an expectation that companies disclose what they do/do not track to employees? Or should employees have to just live with the fact that companies can and will spy on them as a cost of doing business?
17 votes -
What can Aristotle teach us about happiness?
6 votes -
Today I finally beat being a digital pirate despite having to jump a big hurdle
The book Code Complete changed me as a programmer and as a person. It is the best book I have ever read and if you're a programmer I highly recommend you read it. The book was so good that after...
The book Code Complete changed me as a programmer and as a person. It is the best book I have ever read and if you're a programmer I highly recommend you read it.
The book was so good that after having read the pirated version of it I just had to give the author its money's worth. The problem was that almost nobody sells a PDF version of the book - Amazon sells it as a Kindle book, but I prefer PDFs (can use my chioce of software to read it). After searching for a short week I finally found a seller that sells a PDF version. I have never been so happy to find a legal PDF version of a book. Having been a pirate in my teens I'm proud of having gone to such lengths to the right thing. That's all. Just wanted to share this with you.
TL;DR: Instead of pirating a book because I didn't find a legal PDF version spent time searching for a seller and bought it legally.
25 votes -
Cyborg discourse is useless: Philosophy, ethics and technology
5 votes -
What is consciousness? Scientists are beginning to unravel a mystery that has long vexed philosophers
9 votes -
Truth and consequences: In complicated times, a case for more skepticism
6 votes -
Google worker rebellion against military project grows
5 votes -
The last days of the blue-blood harvest
6 votes -
Math can’t solve everything: Questions we need to be asking before deciding an algorithm is the answer
5 votes -
Exploring ethical implications of Yale experiment to reanimate dead brain cells
5 votes -
Can you overdose on happiness? The science and philosophy of deep brain stimulation.
6 votes