Beyond information ethics - Knowledge and care as new values in design

Michael Marcinkowski, Fred Fonseca

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

With computer and information technology (ICT) coming to play a greater and more pervasive role in the lives of people around the world, it becomes important to consider the ways in which values and ethical beliefs are embedded in the technology that we use. Software, in particular, with its ability to both act independent from its creation and be reproduced, shared, and transmitted almost infinitely, opens many new ethical questions both in the implications of its immediate use, as well as any future use and the new contexts that such future use can bring. While Floridi’s Information Ethics presents a well developed, general means by which our interactions with ICT (from design to use) may be ethically guided, it provides no specific, proactive guidance for the creative process of design. When confronted with the need for a particular ICT system, or when faced with the opportunity for open-ended innovation, software and systems designers are left on their own to ask what kind of system should be built. Critiquing relevant ethical approaches, a knowledgeoriented ethics of care is presented that addresses the ethical questions of software design, while still allowing for the application of the variety of different ethical approaches necessary for dealing with the high level of complexity involved in building information communication networks. By acknowledging the complex networks of relationships that are engaged in the use and design of information communication technology, a substantial knowledge of the values and ethical positions embedded in technology proves to be necessary if one hopes to be able to properly practice a carebased ethics in the process of technology design.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)185-198
Number of pages14
JournalCiencia da Informacao
Volume42
Issue number2
StatePublished - May 1 2013

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Library and Information Sciences

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