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Five Moral Dimensions of The Information Age

Five moral dimensions of the information age are discussed: 1) Information rights and obligations, such as what information individuals and organizations can access and protect about themselves, and what obligations exist regarding access to information. 2) Property rights and obligations around protecting traditional intellectual property in a digital society where ownership is difficult to determine. 3) Accountability and control over who can be held liable for harm done to individual and collective information and property rights. 4) System quality standards needed to protect individual rights and societal safety. 5) Quality of life issues around preserving cultural values and protecting institutions in an information-based society.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
3K views1 page

Five Moral Dimensions of The Information Age

Five moral dimensions of the information age are discussed: 1) Information rights and obligations, such as what information individuals and organizations can access and protect about themselves, and what obligations exist regarding access to information. 2) Property rights and obligations around protecting traditional intellectual property in a digital society where ownership is difficult to determine. 3) Accountability and control over who can be held liable for harm done to individual and collective information and property rights. 4) System quality standards needed to protect individual rights and societal safety. 5) Quality of life issues around preserving cultural values and protecting institutions in an information-based society.

Uploaded by

khanrorgsp123
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Five Moral Dimensions of the Information Age

The major ethical, social, and political issues raised by information systems include the
following moral dimensions:
Information rights and obligations. What information rights do individuals and
organizations possess with respect to information about themselves? What can they protect?
What obligations do individuals and organizations have concerning this information?
example would be the organizations right to monitor internet access of the employees on
work computers to ensure there is no questionable content being accessed. The main issue
would be the organization making sure employees are aware they are obtaining this
information.
Property rights and obligations. How will traditional intellectual property rights be
protected in a digital society in which tracing and accounting for ownership are difficult and
ignoring such property rights is so easy? an example of this would be when a company
provides there employee’s that work from home laptops to use. Being that the laptops belong
to the company they are able to take them from the employees at any time regardless what
information they may have stored on them that is personal.
Accountability and control. Who can and will be held accountable and liable for the harm
done to individual and collective information and property rights?
System quality. What standards of data and system quality should we demand to protect
individual rights and the safety of society?
Quality of life. What values should be preserved in an information-and knowledge-based
society? Which institutions should we protect from violation? Which cultural values and
practices are supported by the new information technology?

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