Unit 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Unit 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Unit 4 Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
• In the past 10 years, we have witnessed, arguably, one of the most ethically challenging periods
for U.S. and global business.
• Table below provides a small sample of recent cases demonstrating failed ethical judgment by
senior and middle managers. These lapses in management ethical and business judgment
occurred across a broad spectrum of industries.
• In today’s new legal environment, managers who violate the law and are convicted will most likely
spend time in prison.
• Nowadays, there is a provision globally to impose stiff sentences on business executives based on
the monetary value of the crime, the presence of a conspiracy to prevent discovery of the crime, the
use of structured financial transactions to hide the crime, and failure to cooperate with prosecutors.
• Ethics refers to the principles of right and wrong that individuals, acting as free moral agents, use
to make choices to guide their behaviors.
• Information systems raise new ethical questions for both individuals and societies because they
create opportunities for intense social change, and thus threaten existing distributions of power,
money, rights, and obligations.
• Like other technologies, such as steam engines, electricity, the telephone, and the radio,
information technology can be used to achieve social progress, but it can also be used to commit
crimes and threaten cherished social values.
• The development of information technology will produce benefits for many and costs for others.
• Ethical issues in information systems have been given new urgency by the rise of the Internet and
electronic commerce.
• Internet and digital firm technologies make it easier than ever to assemble, integrate, and
distribute information, unleashing new concerns about the appropriate use of customer
information, the protection of personal privacy, and the protection of intellectual property.
Ethical, social, and political issues are closely linked. The ethical dilemma you may face as a manager of
information systems typically is reflected in social and political debate. One way to think about these
relationships is given in Figure below.
• Example: Imagine society as a more or less calm pond on a summer day, a delicate ecosystem in
partial equilibrium with individuals and with social and political institutions. Individuals know how
to act in this pond because social institutions (family, education, organizations) have developed
well-honed rules of behavior, and these are supported by laws developed in the political sector
that prescribe behavior and promise sanctions for violations. Now toss a rock into the center of
the pond. What happens? Ripples, of course.
• Imagine instead that the disturbing force is a powerful shock of new information technology and
systems hitting a society more or less at rest.
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 themselves? What can they protect?
• 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?
• 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?
• Ethical issues long preceded information technology. Nevertheless, information technology has
heightened ethical concerns, taxed existing social arrangements, and made some laws obsolete
or severely crippled.
• There are four key technological trends responsible for these ethical stresses and they are
summarized in Table below.
• The doubling of computing power every 18 months has made it possible for most organizations
to use information systems for their core production processes.