Friday, March 04, 2005

What If: What If Everyone Really Started Sharing Their Intellectual Property?

Share ---1% this year, 2% next year, 5% by 2010.... Looking for new business models.

In my last posting, I talked about the challenges for the information industry in maintaining and gaining mindshare. Information is money. But what if all the providers started sharing---slowly but surely. My thought is that if more quality information was provided, then both the business world and the social world would be enriched. New business models would emerge. Consider the recent past--Netscape, Microsoft, Google, the Open Source movement. Yes, it's a mixed bag, but let's seriously consider the case for sharing. The business advantages of the recent past seem to come with presence and scale. Presence in the marketing place and popular culture as well. Scale---more eyeballs, more investors, more customers. Win/win works best, certainly much better than win/lose. Right now we have a lot of lose/lose or BIG WIN/BIG LOSS. So what would all this look like. Let's start with the past and present examples and go from there. I'll start and invite you to share as well. Some topics to consider. I'm going to talk about the scholarly world first and then move on to the larger world of information in everyday life--for health, work, education, entertainment:

  • How about a shared academic vocabulary maintained by interested parties working together? Maybe OCLC, the Library of Congress, IFLA, DSpace, ARL, ALA, ACRL, standards groups, etc. Apologies to those outside this acronym jungle. These are non-profits for the most part, professional associations, or other stakeholders. We have so much already. It needs to be web-ready now and very flexible for future transformations of technologies. I'm no expert here, but there are many. We'd all benefit from the basic structure, the domain specificity, and the sharing itself. What a great way to educate grad students. What a way to invite the young and life-long learners to get into new worlds of knowledge.
  • Think globally. Work with mutiple languages, internation expertise, cultural differences, cultural richness.
  • Provide quality content through public, school, and community networks. Take a small subset of scientific, health, and technical info and make it available for free through Google, Yahoo, etc. with guidelines for information professionals/librarians to increase the use of these materials and lead to sales. We're already doing this in some ways. Let's be more co-operative and systematic.
  • Co-ordinate research on user profile/user behavior and needs and also market evaluation with colleges, universities, libraries, library consortia, other non-profits and other for-profit organizations. There are such similar goals across these groups.
  • Promote literacy and education in both formal and informal ways.
  • Think about social responsibility as good for business as well as good for people.
  • Test new models. If they don't work, try something else.
  • Build bridges between for-profit and non-profit. Aren't we wasting time in working at cross purposes without considering other options?
  • Fight defensiveness. Get cozy with Open Source and new ways to protect intellectual property rights. Again I'm no expert here, but my guess is that we could all benefit if we didn't spend out time fighting with each other. Share and multiply the wealth in people and property.

Let me stop here for now. So much more to consider. Please let me hear from you here or in my email. msmith@infoethics.org

Time is Money or Is that Information?

Time is Money--Or Is That Information?
This week while I've been out working hard at my teaching/marketing job at Drexel and learning a lot about the information industry and also the impact of blogs on the industry--both pro and con, I haven't been writing my own blog. In one powerful presentation by the Information Today people, I learned that InfoToday (Medford,NJ) is cultivting blogging as a new form of serious publishing. http://www.infotoday.com
What does this development mean in the battle for intellectual property and mindshare? MINDSHARE was the theme of this years NFAIS annual meeting.
The stuggle for mindshare is also a struggle for direction in a new landscape of potential. None of us know what the shape of the society much less the information market will be in the future. We can be the shapers of this new world, so what values do we want to preserve? Discard? Introduce?
In a competitive environment, what about those who can not read? Who do not get enough to eat? Who have never seen a computer? What about the global digital divide? Literacy? Poverty? Healthcare?
How do we invest our money? Our energies? Our time?

Friday, February 25, 2005

GlobalInfoEthics-- Group Blog

Our group blog is set-up. Take a look at http://globalinfoethics.blogspot.com

Take a look, and let me know if you would like to be a part of the group. How about once a week or once a month? Let's see how it works.

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Join the TeamInfoEthics Blog Group-- Beginning Monday, April 4th

You are invited to be a part of the first InfoEthics Blog Group. I propose to set up TeamInfoEthics and to invite you to participate. If we get seven people, we can each have a day of the week for a month or two as an experiment. If we get more people, we can cycle them in. I know lots of you would like to have a blog but don't feel you have the time to keep one up yourself. We can always have spin-offs if you decide to set up your own. In the spirit of ICIE, we could have a multi-language blog and perhaps help each other with translations. Email me or comment here: msmith@infoethics.org

A Question from a Reader: Life Extension and Information Ethics

Thanks for the question-- How wonderful that I have an answer.....several really. First, the whole field of life extension and CR/CRON (Calorie Restriction/Optimal Nutrition) illustrates how hard it is to have information taken seriously when it doesn't fit societal expectation. As Kuhn said, we don't see what we don't expect to see; we can't see data if we don't have the conceptual framework to put it in. We don't expect cars to run on Diet Coke, so if they did, we probably would believe it enough to try it. I know, there are better examples.
Next, I've worked on the syllabus for BioInfoEthics. I still need to figure out how to copy and paste here or insert image files stored somewhere else. Maybe my nex project should be a literature review of the ethics of life extension. I'd start with Art Caplan's article that I need to find again. Any help from you all out there? Let me get busy and look for articles, books, etc. I'll post some here.
Thanks again reader.

Friday, February 18, 2005

International Journal of Information Ethics

International Journal of Information Ethics

Here it is. Congrats to all.

Weekend: February 19-20-- Social Security: The Information War

Let me post this topic for your weekend reflection. What I'd like for our focus is not the pros and cons of the issue but the ways in which the information is managed by the politicians and the media--particularly the political cartoons. Let's look around and see what's out there in the cartoon world. There are many good sites on the web. I'll post my favorite here. I like this site because the cartoons are organized by topics, and they are easy to print. Of course, always give credit for the wonderfully creative talents of these talented people. Let me know what you are thinking about the information war swirling around the social security issues. Happy Weekend.

http://cagle.slate.msn.com/politicalcartoons/

UDHR-- A Neater Link

So sorry. I"m just learning to use this blog software, so I didn't know my link would be TOOO BIG. Let me try again. I'll try too sizes. I like experimenting.

http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html

http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html

Sunday, February 13, 2005

So You Want to Watch Some Movies related to Ethics and Technology?

Today I'm posting a list of some of the movies I've used in classes and find valuable in thinking about the challenges of information and technology. Please let me know others.

Movies
Check these out and let me know of any others--- "The Magnificent Ambersons," "Fahrenheit 451,"
“E.T.,”
"The Handmaid's Tale,"
"Tron,"
"Blade Runner,"
“Gattica,”
“Johnny Mnemonic,”
“AI,”
"Minority Report,"
"The Ghost in the Machine,"
"Lawnmower Man,"
"Metropolis,"
"The Electronic Grandmother,"
"The Ugly Little Boy," and many others.

Syllabus: The Master Syllabus: Global Information Ethics

The Master Syllabus: Global Information Ethics
2003 Version
Martha M. Smith, Ph. D.

Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
T. S. Eliot, “Choruses from ‘The Rock’"


Course Description: In exploring global information ethics, we will consider both ethical dilemmas and the strategies available to information professionals to address them. Topics will include access, equity, intellectual property rights, privacy and confidentiality, censorship, personnel issues, and other practical and complex issues. In addition, broader topics such as the Digital Divide, Intellectual Property Rights, Information Democracy, Global Information Justice, and Human Information Rights will be discussed.
Various philosophical traditions will be examined, including utilitarianism, deontological approaches including Kant’s categorical imperative, Rawl’s theory of justice, and Fletcher's situation ethics. The literature of philosophy of technology, especially the philosophy of information technologies, will also be included.
The roles and the responsibilities of the information professional both in the work place and in the arena of public policy will be considered. Does professionalism require neutrality or moral agency? Are information technologies ethically neutral or laden with values? What decision-making models apply to the current challenges?
In addition, various information futures will be imagined with the help of fiction, such as the writings of David Brin, John Cheever, William Carlos Williams, Erskine Caldwell, Margaret Atwood, Isaac Asimov, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, Ursula Le Guin, Marge Piercy, Ray Bradbury; and videos such as "The Magnificent Ambersons," "Fahrenheit 451," “E.T.,” "The Handmaid's Tale," "Tron," "Blade Runner," “Gattica,” “Johnny Mnemonic,” “AI,” “The Atomic ???,” "The Ghost in the Machine," "Lawnmower Man," "The Electronic Grandmother," "The Ugly Little Boy," and many others.
Finally, the following terms and critical thinking categories will be used to explore these matters.
Information
Informational and communications technologies (ICT’s)
The uses and abuses of information
Information: creation, organization, retrieval, storage, evaluation, use
Moral, morals, and morality
Moral agency
Ethics
Applied ethics
Technological determinism
Technology as neutral
Value neutrality
Professional neutrality
Social responsibility
Philosophy of technology
Utilitarianism
Deontology
Justice theory
Situation ethics
Medical ethics
Bioethics
Environmental ethics
Information ethics
Computer ethics
BioInfoEthics
Life world
Dimensions of the Life World: Humanity, Nature, and Technology
Major Themes of Global Information Ethics: Access, Ownership, Privacy, Security, and Community
Aspects of Moral Agency: Identity, Knowledge, and Community
The Ethical Self
The Ethical Professional
The Global Information Environment
Assignments
Each student will be asked to choose a topic and to become a class resource on that area. These topics might include: privacy, intellectual property rights, the relationship between information law and information ethics, global information justice, Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the ethics of fee vs.
free information access, the Freedom of Information Act, networking ethics, the contribution of Ellul, Jonas, LeGuin, Hauptman, Swan, Mumford, Boulding, or another significant person, feminist information ethics, ethical dilemmas in cyberpunk, virtual libraries and ethical issues, the ethics of software design, ethics and distance education, intelligent agents as threat or hope, the FBI library awareness campaign and library patron confidentiality, reference ethics, ethics in programs of Science, Technology, and Society, computer ethics, the ethics of encryption, codes of the information professions, informed consent, the right to know, media ethics, reproductive ethics, environmental ethics, and many others.

Goals of the Course

1. To survey the issues and approaches to ethical dilemmas in using information and information and communications technologies in the global information environment.
2. To develop the ability to use various approaches to ethical analysis in order to evaluate dilemmas and to practice problem analysis and decision-making in culturally diverse situations.
3. To engage in imagining, with other members of the class and beyond the classroom, the challenges of the future.

Required Texts

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The United Nations General Assembly.

The Intellectual Freedom Manual. ALA. The latest edition. Refer also to earlier editions.

William Gibson. Neuromancer. New York: Ace Books, 1984.

Examples of Short Stories:
Brian Aldiss, “Super Toys Last All Summer Long.”
Isaac Asimov, “Robbie.”
Erskine Caldwell, “Masses of Men.”
Ray Bradbury, “The Veldt,” “There Will Come Soft Rains.”

You also may want to read a good general survey of philosophy, such as Alasdair MacIntyre's A Short History of Ethics (New York: Macmillan, 1966). Useful articles may be found also in the Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science, in the Encyclopedia of Philosophy, or in the more recent Encyclopedia of Religion. The first (1978) and second (1994) editions of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics may also be useful.

For general background on the shape of the global information society and issues facing decision-makers, see some of the following books:
Borgman, Christine L. 2000. From Gutenberg to the Global Information Infrastructure. MIT Press.

Brown, John Seely and Duguid, Paul. 2000. The Social Life of Information. Harvard Business School Press

Graubard, Stephen R. and LeClerc, Paul. 1999. Books, Bricks, and Bytes: Libraries in the Twenty-first Century. Transaction Publishers.

Webster, Frank. 1995. Theories of the Information Society. Routledge.

Additional useful background may be found also in the writings of Manuel Castells, Thomas Froehlich, Rafael Capurro, Sherry Turkle, Lewis Mumford, Jacques Ellul, Hans Jonas, Joseph Fletcher, Don Ihde, James Beniger, Ian Barbour, Michael Foucault, J. David Bolter, Jurgen Habermas, Martin Heidegger, Bruno Latour, Sandra Harding, Thomas Kuhn, Andrew Abbott, Carl Mitcham, Melvin Kranzberg, Aldo Leopold, Brian Pfaffenberger, Tom Forester, Paul Durbin, Clifford Christians, and Joseph Rouse.

Course Requirements and Grading

Grades will be based upon the following:

1. (25%) Active participation in online course interaction: the discussion board, assignment postings, chat, online conferences, etc.

2. (25%) A course portfolio to be used as the basis for a summary web site. The web site should evidence an understanding of all required materials, some optional resources, and the particular interests and expertise of each student. Be creative. Think of this as something you might use to display your achievements in the class in a form that employers might use to evaluate. You may find that executive summaries are a useful way to keep track of your readings.

3. (25%) An electronic pathfinder, electronic annotated bibliography with an introduction, or a bibliographic essay on a chosen topic, with a one-page class summary to be presented to class members. This exercise should be as current as possible, using older materials as only as essential background. Excellent examples of bibliographic essays are found in the ARIST volumes and in Choice.

4. (25%) A cumulative, comprehensive “At Home” Final Exam. No notes, no books, 2-3 hours maximum.


Schedule of Readings and Assignments

Class 1: Global Information Ethics: An Introduction
Defining Terms: Morals, Morality, Ethics, and Etiquette
Previewing Ethical Traditions and Methods
Humanity, Nature, and Technology: Conflicts or Balance
Themes of GIE: Access, Ownership, Privacy, Security, and Community

Class 2: Neutrality vs. Moral Agency: Personal Integrity, Professional Ethics, and Social Responsibility

Readings:
D. J. Foskett, The Creed of the Librarian: No Politics, No Religion, No Morals, 1962.
John Cheever, "The Housebreaker of Shady Hill," from The Stories of John Cheever, 1978.
Robert Coles, "Our Moral Lives," Society 23 (1986).
Robert Hauptman, "Professional or Culpability? An Experiment in Ethics," WilsonLibrary Bulletin 50, 626-27.
Susan Rathbun, "Ethics Issues in Reference Service: Overview and Analysis," North Carolina Libraries 51 (Spring 1993).
John Swan, "Helpful Librarians and Hurtful Books," Catholic Library World 59 (May/June 1988): 271-74.
Robert C. Dowd, "I Want to Find Out How to Freebase Cocaine; or Yet Another Unobtrusive Test of Reference Performance," The Reference Librarian 25/26 (1989): 483-93.
Bruce Flanders, "A Delicate Balance (Keeping Children Out of the Gutters Along the Information Highway)," School Library Journal (October, 1994).

Neuromancer and the responses to it. Use book reviews, results from citation analysis, literary criticism (cyberpunk), etc. What will be the role of the information professional in the world of Neuromancer? Watch a good video, such as “AI,” “Gattica,” "Blade Runner," "The Handmaid's Tale," "Tron," "Stargate," "The Gods Must Be Crazy," "Frankenstein," "Fahrenheit 451," "Dune," "The Name of the Rose," "E.T.," "Star Wars," "Lawnmower Man," "2001," "Jurassic Park," "The
Andromeda Strain," "The China Syndrome," "The Atomic Cafe (1982)," "The Magnificent Ambersons," "1984," "Desk Set," "Modern Times," and many more. Please make your suggestions.

Class 3: Is Privacy Obsolete? Privacy, Confidentiality, and the Information Technologies

Readings:
John Cheever, "The Enormous Radio," from The Stories of John Cheever.
Ted Diamond, "Opinion: The Escrowed Encryption Standard: The Clipper Chip and Civil Liberties," Internet Research 4 (Fall 1994).
Lillian N. Gerhardt, "Ethical Back Talk: Librarians Must Protect Each User's Right to Privacy with Respect to Information Sought or Received, and Materials Consulted, Borrowed, or Acquired," School Library Journal 36 (June 1990). See the series of articles by Gerhardt.
Preview: Herbert N. Foerstel, Surveillance in the Stacks: The FBI's Library Awareness Program, 1991. (Many articles have been written on this program. Consult Library Literature or LISA.)

Class 4: Censorship, Selection, and the Impact of the Internet: Has Technology Changed Everything?

Using Traditional Ethical Strategies: Utilitarianism and Deontology.
How are these useful in thinking about censorship?

Readings:
Lester Asheim, "Not Censorship But Selection," Wilson Library Bulletin (1953).
Joy M. Greiner, "Professional Views: Intellectual Freedom as a Professional Ethic," Public Libraries 28 (March/April 1989): 69-72.


Class 5: Intellectual Freedom, Freedom of Speech, and Article 19: Is There a “Right to Know”?

Lecture: Situation Ethics and Justice-Based Approaches: Eternal or Flexible? Strategies toward Decision-Making

Video: "The Electronic Grandmother," adapted from Ray Bradbury's I Sing the Body Electric, 1970.

Readings:
Documents: Universal Declaration of Human Rights, especially Article 19.
ALA. The Freedom to Read Statement.
ALA. Library Bill of Rights.
The Freedom to Read Statement.
A. J. Anderson, "The FBI Wants You- to Spy," Library Journal 141, 37-39.
The ALA Intellectual Freedom Manual. Note both current and previous editions.
"Libraries in the Tradition of Freedom of Expression," Special Issue of The Bookmark 47 (Winter 1989).
"Intellectual Freedom/Parts I and II," Diana Woodward, ed., Library Trends 39 (Summer/Fall 1990).


Class 6: Intellectual Property Rights: Who Owns Information?

Readings:
Ann Branscomb, Who Owns Information?
Carol Gould, The Web of Information: Ethical and Social Implications of Computer Networking, 1986.
Deborah Johnson, Computer Ethics, 3rd ed.


Class 7: Information Democracy: Myth or Reality?

Questions to Ask: Information Democracy, the Information Poor, and the Information Elite: Is there a Digital Divide?

Video: "The Ugly Little Boy"

Look carefully at JASIS: Journal of the American Society for Information Science (July 1994) special section on "Information Resources and Democracy," Leah A. Lievrouw, ed.

Readings:
Articles by Ronald Doctor on information democracy and social equity:
"Seeking Equity in the National Information Infrastructure." Internet Research 4 (Fall 1994).
"Social Equity and Information Technologies: Moving Toward Information Democracy," in ARIST: Annual Review of Information Science and Technology 27 (1992), Martha Williams, ed.
"Information Technologies and Social Equity: Confronting the Revolution," JASIS 42 (1991): 216-28.
Consider the Brian Pfaffenberger book Democratizing Information: Online Databases and the Rise of End-User Searching and compare with Brenda Dervin's "Information Democracy," JASIS 45 (July 1994).
Also consider Dr. Elfreda A. Chatman's work on the information needs of marginal populations and definitions of the information poor. Note that Doctor cites Chatman's work. (In addition to Doctor's citations, see Library Literature and LISA)

Class 8: Ethics and Management: Human Resources (Hiring, Firing, and In-Between)

Questions to Ask: Knowledge Workers and the Information Age: Can We Balance Diversity and Autonomy?

Readings:
Choose a case from Herbert White's Ethical Dilemmas Libraries: A Collection of Case Studies, 1992.

Erskine Caldwell, "Masses of Men."

Selections from Human Resources (May 1994) on Downsizing.

Authors such as Peter Drucker, Alvin Toffler (Powershift, et al.), Harland Cleveland's work, The Knowledge Executive, and selections from the Harvard Business Review. ???Harlan Cleveland, Servant Leadership.

Class 9: Ethics and Leadership: Automation, Networking, Contracts, and Consultants

Readings:
Martha M. Smith, "Infoethics for Leaders: Models of Moral Agency in the Information Environment," Library Trends 40 (Winter 1992): 553-70.
Look through Library HiTech's issue on ethics, 4 (Winter 1986). See especially J. Drabenstott, ed. The Consultant's Corner: A Forum on Ethics in the Library Automation Process, pp. 107-19 and Wilson M. Stahl, "Automation and Ethics: A View from the Trenches," pp. 53-57.


Class 10: The Virtual Library: Access vs. Ownership

Readings:
Robert Hauptman, "The Internet, Cyberethics, and Virtual Morality," Online (March 1994): 8-9.
William Gibson’s Neuromancer and review and reflect upon some of the literature which refers to it. "Who are the information professionals in the world of Neuromancer?"

Class 11: The Digital Library/The Virtual Library/The Library without Walls

Questions to Ask: Reference/Information Services in the Future: The Virtual Librarian

Readings:
Samuel Rothstein, "Where Does It Hurt? Identifying the Real Concerns in the Ethics of Reference Service," The Reference Librarian 25-26 (1989):307-20.
Lawson Crowe and Susan Anthes, "The Academic Librarian and Information Technology: Ethical Issues," College and Research Libraries 49 (March 1988): 123-30.
Ruth Palmquist, "The Impact of Information Technology on the Individual," ARIST 27 (1992), Martha Williams, ed.
Rafael Capurro, "Moral Issues in Information Science," Journal of Information Science 11 (1985): 113-23.
Look at Jonathan W. Emord's Freedom, Technology, and the First Amendment, 1991, or books on the first amendment.

Class 12: Professional Ethics in the Information Age

Questions to Ask: How do library and information professionals balance their personal beliefs, professional ethics, and social responsibilities as citizens of the world?
What do librarians have to do in their work that they would rather not do?
What is the role of fiction in the human experience? In professional development? In public policy?
How can fiction help to guide decision-making?
What is the role of professional codes? Think about their internal and external usefulness.

Video: "Politics, Privacy, and the Press"

Readings:
Howard S. Becker, "Whose Side Are We On?" Social Problems 14 (1967): 239-49.
ALA. Code of Professional Ethics (1981).
LA. British Library Association
ALA. Draft of New Code (1994).
ASIS Professional Guidelines (1992/1993).

Lee Finks, "Librarianship Needs a New Code of Professional Ethics," American Libraries 22 (January 1991): 84-88.
William Carlos Williams (1993-1963), "The Use of Force," The Doctor Stories. Introduced by Robert Coles.
Ray Bradbury's "Marionettes Inc." The Stories of Ray Bradbury, 1980.
Effy Oz, "Ethical Standards for Computer Professionals: A Comparative Analysis of Four Major Codes," Journal of Business Ethics 12 (1993): 709-26.
T. J. Froehlich, "Ethical Considerations for Information Professionals," ARIST 27 (1992): 291-324.
Robert Coles, The Call of Stories: Teaching and the Moral Imagination, 1989. Read introductory chapter and sample from the rest.
J. Kultgen, Ethics and Professionalism, argues that professionalism is mainly driven by self-interest. Is that true in library/information professions?

Class 13: Information Professionals and Social Responsibility

What roles are librarians and information professionals playing in the new information society? Economic influence? Political influence? Public policy influence?

Readings:
Manfred Kochen, "Ethics and Information Science," JASIS 83 (May 1987), 206-10.
Manfred Kochen, "Information and Society," ARIST 18 (1983): 277-304, Martha Williams, ed. A very early hint of the issues which would shape information ethics.
Dorothy Nelkin, "The Social Power of Genetic Information," The Code of Codes: Scientific and Social Issues in the Human Genome Project, Part III: Ethics, Law, and Society.
The Universal Declaration of Genetic Rights. UNESCO.
Ray Bradbury's "There Will Come Soft Rains" and "A Sound of Thunder," from The Stories of Ray Bradbury, 1980.

Class 14: Information Ethics: Beyond Professional Ethics to Public Policy and Consumer Rights

Readings:
Martha M. Smith, "Educating for Information Ethics: Assumptions and Definitions," Journal of Information Ethics 2 (Spring 1993).
Martha M. Smith, "Educating for Information Ethics: Information Ethics-101," Journal of Information Ethics 2 (Fall 1993).
Martha M. Smith, “Global Information Justice,” Library Trends, ??????
Clifford Christians, "Information Ethics in a Complicated Age," from the Allerton Conference. See F. W. Lancaster, Ethics and the Librarian.
T. J. Froehlich, "Ethical Considerations in Technology-Transfer," Library Trends 40 (1991): 275-302.
Also see introductory statements by editor and publisher on the purpose in the first volume of the Journal of Information Ethics.

Review:
Joseph Fletcher's Morals and Medicine, 1954, especially the subtitle and the Table of Contents. What information issues can you identify?

Class 15: The Social Construction of Information Technology: Ethics in Context

Readings:
Carl's Mitcham's "Computer Ethos, Computer Ethics," Paul T. Durbin, ed., Research in Philosophy & Technology 8 (1985).

Note: Rafael Capurro's "Informationsethos, Informationsethik: Gedanken zum varantwortungsvollen Handeln im Bereich der Fachinformation," in Nachrichten fur Dokumentation 39 (1988): 4.
Rafael Capurro's "What Is Information Science For? A Philosophical Reflection," P. Vakkari and B. Cronin, eds., Conceptions of Library and Information Science.
James Bailey, "First We Reshape Our Computers, then Our Computers Reshape Us: The Broader Implications of Parallelism," Daedalus (Winter 1992). The whole issue is dedicated to parallel computing.
Brian Pfaffenberger, ch. 1, "The Social Construction of Online Technology," Democratizing Information: Online Databases and the Rise of End-User Searching.
Lewis Mumford, "The Monastery and the Clock," Technics and Civilization, 1934, pp. 12-18.

Look at:
The pictures in Shoshana Zuboff's In the Age of the Smart Machine.
The work of Arnold Pacey, Samuel Florman, Langdon Winner, Gibson Winter, Peter Berger and Thomas Luckman, or Ernest Goffman.

Preview “Fahrenheit 451.”

Class 16: Philosophy of Technology and the Self

Readings:
Joseph Margolis, "The Technological Self," Edmund F. Byrne and Joseph C. Pitt, eds., Technological Transformations: Contextual and Conceptual Implications, Philosophyand Technology 5 (1989).
Sherry Turkle, The Second Self, Introduction and Part II or Part III.

Consider: Michael Foucault, Jurgen Habermas, Joseph Margolis, Don Ihde, etc.

Class 17: Philosophy of Technology: Using the Past to Understand the Future

Questions to Ask: What is technology? How shall we define technology? How do we know and understand technology? What is the purpose/the goal of technology? (Ontology, Epistemology, and Teleology)


Readings:
F. Ferre, Philosophy of Technology, survey chapters and topics.

"Introduction: Information Technology and Computers as Themes in the Philosophy of Technology," Carl Mitcham and Alois Huning, eds. Philosophy and Technology, II. Information Technology and Computers in Theory and Practice. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 90 (1986).
Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility, Ch. 6: "A Critique of Utopia and the Ethic of Responsibility".
Clifford Christians, "A Theory of Normative Technology," Technological Transformation: Contextual and Conceptual Implications, Edmund R. Byrne and Joseph C. Pitt, eds. Philosophy and Technology 5 (1989).
Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society,
Compare:
Jonas and Aldo Leopold's chapter on environmental ethics, "The Land Ethic," in A Sand County Almanac.


Class 18: Global Information Justice: Diffusion and Transfer

Questions to Answer: Can we find a global consensus on global information justice?

Video: “Envisioning the Future:The Business of Paradigms"

Reading:
C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures, particularly the last section, Part IV, on rich and poor countries. Is Snow's argument still useful to us?
Martha M. Smith, “Global Information Justice,” Library Trends.


Class 19: Ethics in Cyberspace: Computer Ethics, Cyberethics, and Internet Ethics

Readings:
Robert A. Jones. "The Ethics of Research in Cyberspace," Internet Research 4 (Fall 1994).
Deborah Johnson, Computer Ethics.
Duncan Langford, Internet Ethics.
Cyberethics

Class 20: Ethics and Values in Literature in relation to Science and Technology, particularly Information Technology

Questions to Ask: What is the value of fiction in understanding ethics and making decisions?

Review: Robert Coles, The Call of Stories

Consider: Wayne Booth, The Company We Keep: The Ethics of Fiction. Note particularly his bibliography.

Class 21: Information, the Self, and the Machine

Questions to Ask: Science Fiction and the Future of Morality

Readings:
"The Future of Work: Does It Belong to Us or to the Robots," Sar A. Levitan and Clifford M. Johnson, Contemporary Moral Controversies in Technology, A. Pablo Iannone, ed., 1987.
Information as God:
The Robot Librarian? Fact or Fiction
The End of Reading? Myth or Reality, S. Birkerts
The End of the Individual?
Isaac Asimov, "Robbie," in Asimov, Isaac, I Robot.
Erik Harry. The Society of Mind.

Also Cheever, Piercy, Bradbury, Gibson, Sterling, Brin,

Class 22: Who Are the Information Professionals? Data, Information, Knowledge, Understanding, and Wisdom

Questions to Ask: Whose side are we on today?

Video: "From Information to Wisdom"

Readings:
Anne McCaffrey, "The Ship Who Sang," from Women of Wonder, Pamela Sargent, ed., 1974, 82-107.

Reflect on:
The quotation from T. S. Eliot from "Choruses from the Rock."
What is the relationship between information, knowledge, and wisdom? (See Maxwell, From Knowledge to Wisdom.)
The role of women in science fiction and on the presence or absence of women writers in science fiction and fiction/poetry about technology. There is a rich literature on this subject. For resources: See bibliographies in Lost in Space and Future Females, Marleen Barr.

Please watch "1984" or "The Handmaid's Tale" before the next class.

Class 23: Utopias, Dystopias, and the Fate of the Book

Questions to Ask:

Readings:
Daniel Bell, "The Social Framework of the Information Society," The Computer Age: A Twenty-Year View, Michael L. Dertouzos and Joel Moses, eds., 1979, pp. 163-211.

Yoneji Masuda, "Computopia," in The Information Future, 1983.

Sven Birkerts, The Gutenburg Elegies???


Class 24: Science, Technology, and Visions of the Future

Questions to Ask: What in the present best informs the future?


Visions of the future in 1984, Neuromancer, Fahrenheit 451, Blade Runner, The Handmaid's Tale, etc. Questions: Who and where are the information professionals? Elites? Underground rebels? Citizen users?

Class 25: The Future for Libraries: Dynamos or Dinosaurs?

Questions to Ask:


Readings:
Richard E. Walton, "Social Choice in the Development of Advanced Information Technology," Contemporary Moral Controversies in Technology, 1987.
James Thurber, "The Human Being and the Dinosaur" and other stories.

Class 26: The Future of Information Professionals: Social Responsibility and Public Policy: Whose Side Are We on Now?

Questions to Ask:

Recall: H. S. Becker, "Whose Side Are We On?"

Class 26: Humanity, Nature, and Technology: Rafael's Capurro's Vision of the Information, Technology, and Ethics

Questions to Ask:

Readings:
Rafael Capurro, "Information Technology and Technologies of the Self," presented at the ASIS Conference, sessions on Information Democracy, 1992.?????

Rafael Capurro, "Towards an Information Ecology," Information and Quality, I. Wormell, ed., London: Taylor Graham, 1990, pp. 122-39.
Rafael Capurro, "Informatics and Hermeneutics," Software Development and Reality Construction. C. Floyd, H. Zullinghoven, R. Budde, R. Keil-Slawik, eds. Berlin: Springer, 1992, pp. 363-75.

Rafael Capurro, "Epistemology and Information Science," Stockholm: Royal Institute of Technology Library, 1985.


Class 27: Personal Futures and Moral Agency: Shaping Tomorrow

Questions to Ask:

Continuing Class Discussion: Capurro's Vision in contrast to Neuromancer, Fahrenheit 451, etc.

Class 28: Moral Agency and Professional Ethics: Professional and Social Responsibility

http://www.cprs.org/



Questions to Ask: The role of the profession in social advocacy?





********************************************************
Sample Questions for the Final Exam

Future of books, libraries, and librarians

Distance Education, Online Education, and Life-long Learning


The Future of Publishing, Ebooks, EJournals, and Self-Publishing




§ Is information technology value neutral? Why or why not? Be as specific as possible. Refer to readings, discussions, examples from both inside and outside of class.
§ How do you think about the role of the information professional in relation to supervisory personnel in times of conflict about ethical dilemmas? Give a brief scenario which illustrates your viewpoint. Refer as necessary to readings, etc.
§ How have new technologies changed the world of the librarian in confronting ethical dilemmas? Illustrate.
§ Describe your own sense of moral agency, balancing responsibilities among the various loyalties which professionals have. Give specific examples of how you would act or make a decision as a moral agent.
§ Describe the various codes studied in class. What makes a good professional code? Why?
§ Digital Divide?
§ Apply John Rawl’s veil of ignorance as you imagine yourself in a third-world or developing country. How would you describe the importance of information ethics to those who are beginning to use information technologies for the first time?
§ Is privacy obsolete or will it become obsolete? Explain why or why not.
§ How is professional ethics different from etiquette or personal values? How is each important?
§ What have you learned from using fiction in studying ethics? Illustrate from the readings.
§ Are smart machines our slaves? Our friends? Our masters?
§ Write your own question.


2005 Syllabus: Information Ethics-- Sample Syllabus for a Quarter in the Grad MS(LIS) and the MSIS (Information Systems) Programs

Hi Everybody,
Today I'm posting a sample syllabus for making my information ethics course a part of the formal curriculum of IST. At Drexel, we can offer a course as a trial for two terms. Then it has to be brought before the university to be considered as a formal course.
Note that this is a course for a quarter--10 weeks of classes and then a week for exams. You may also be interested in the assignments--blogging and an electronic portfolio. I usually teach this course asynchronously online, so I find that individual blogs, blogrings, and electronic portfolios encourage adult students to integrate their knowledge and skills with technology and their previous subject content and experience backgrounds in a very fulfilling way. We have a diverse group of students, usually from mid-twenties to mid-fifties, most with substantial career experience. Blogging and electronic portfolios can be done very simply or can encourage students to utilize their special talents with online content. Everybody learns from everybody else. For an information ethics course this is ideal because it gives us all a chance to explore the issues and to allow experience the world of cyberspace and how professionals can utlize the web for professional expression and collaboration.
Syllabus: Information Ethics
Dr. Marti Smith
Drexel University
College of Information Science and Technology
(For more syllabi see http://icie.zkm.de)
Syllabus Sample
2005
College of Information Science and Technology
Drexel University
INFOxxx
Information Ethics
Martha M. Smith, Ph. D.
marti.smith@cis.drexel.edu


Contact Information:
Office Address: Rush Building, #208
College of Information Science and Technology
3141 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19104-2875
215-895-1532; FAX 215-895-2494
Alternative email addresses:
msmith@infoethics.org

Course Description:
Presents the philosophical foundations of applied ethics and technology with primary focus on (1.) the uses and abuses of information, (2.) human moral agency in relation to new information and communication technologies (ICTs), and (3.) the meaning of social responsibility in the global information society, including the concepts of global information justice and human rights.

Specifically this course will consider ethical dilemmas, decision-making strategies, and public policy issues around the broad themes of Access, Ownership, Privacy, Security, and Community including headline topics such as intellectual property rights vs. intellectual freedom; the USA Patriot Act vs. civil liberties; the uses of genetic information for health care vs. for discrimination in insurance. The course will build understanding of major and alternative ethical traditions to inform personal moral agency, professional conduct, and civic participation.

Overview of Weekly Topics
Week 1: Introduction to information ethics in relation to other areas of applied ethics, including computer ethics, cyberethics, engineering ethics, media ethics, and related areas, and current challenges;

Week 2: Philosophy of information and philosophy of technology as applied in contemporary life;

Weeks 3 and 4: Various models of decision making in professional practice and civic participation;

Weeks 5 and 6: The application of information ethics to professional practice and participation in public policy, including the relationship between ethics and law;

Weeks 7 to 10: Current ethical dilemmas under the broad categories of:
** Access,
** Ownership,
** Privacy,
** Security, and
** Community such as intellectual property rights, copyright, and copyleft; the USA Patriot Act and civil rights; the digital divide and information democracy; and global information justice.

Assignments and Grading:
The major assignment for this course will be the building of an electronic portfolio containing assignments such as weekly blog entries, resource pathfinders, and an information ethics case study problem for analysis.

Weekly blog postings (Weeks 2-9) will be due on Mondays by noon of each week. Weekly postings should be between 200-300 words and should reflect the readings with engagement with the assignment question or topic. You may use charts, tables, and hotlinks in your text and may attach small audio and video files.

Grades will be based upon the following:
(60%) Term Project: The Completed Electronic Portfolio
(40%) 8 Weekly Blog Postings and Interaction with Others—Weeks 2-9

Grading Scale
A= 90-100
B= 80-89
C= Below 79

Special Needs and Accommodations: If you have a disability and need special help, you must identify yourself to the Drexel Disability Office in time for your needs to be reviewed and appropriate plans made for help.

Required readings will change each term:
Current Required Text:
Herman Tavani. (2004) Ethics and technology: Ethical issues in an age of information and communication technology. John Wiley. See http://www.wiley.com/college/tavani

Examples of Optional Readings and Resources: The reading books below may be valuable in your professional library. Other readings and resource lists will be given throughout the term.

Richard Holeton (ed.) (1997). Composing cyberspace: Identity, community, and knowledge in the electronic age. WCB/McGraw Hill. Also see companion website at
http://www.mhhe.com/socscience/english/holeton

Richard A. Spinello and Harman T. Tavani (eds.) (2001), Readings in cyberethics. Jones and Bartlett. Also see web resources at
http://www.jbpub.com/cyberethics/toolsforlearning.cfm

Albert Teich (ed.), Technology and the Future. Wadsworth. Most recent edition. Also see companion website, Albert Teich’s Technology and the Future Toolkit, at
http://www.alteich.com/

Web Site: The International Center for Information Ethics

ICIE http://icie.zkm.de

Wonderful resources here. Join the virtual of community of ICIE.

See for
People,
Research, and
Teaching

Saturday, February 05, 2005

Vote for Your Favorite IE Issue and Tell Us Why

Vote here and feel free to add more:

Here are some choices:

Privacy: How Much Is Enough?

How do we balance having access to our medical records and privacy protections?

Shoud Human Gnome Information Be Public--accessible to all researchers?



Homeland Security vs. Civil Rights: Can We Have Both?

Balancing Intellectual Property Rights and Intellectual Freedom: Owners vs. Users--Can Everybody Win?

What about hate speech, pornography, and other seriously objectionable materials on the Internet?

Freedom to Read: Should Children's Reading Ever Be Censored? By Parents? By Librarians?

Would you buy the "Walter, the Farting Dog" books for Your Children or Grandchildren?

Should libraries filter the Internet? For Children? For Everybody?





Basics: New Development on the IE Stage: Information Technology Ethics

New Developments: Information Technology Ethics--
What's in a Name?
Information Ethics or Information Technology Ethics
Remember computer ethics? Well it seems that now the computer ethics people are using the therm Information Technology Ethics. Does it matter? Why the change? Throughout these years one of my major interests has been in all of the term used to talk about ethics and all these new technologies as they impinge on our lives. So what do changes in terms mean? What does it mean when groups change their names, start new journal or newsletter, use new terminology for conferences? Here are some of the most popular terms:
How many terms can be used to describe information, technology; ethics or information and communication technology ethics; science, technology, and ethics-- (note that more specific documentation would show very unclear patterns of use with specific terms; this is not any kind of definitive pronouncement--here intended to encourage more thinking)
Pre-newtech terms (a small sample):
Engineering Ethics, Medical Ethics, Bioethics, Land ethic,
Business Ethics, Professional Ethics, Legal Ethics, Journalism ethics
Early newtech terms (a small sample):
Computer ethics, Information technology ethics, Communication ethics, Media ethics, Information ethics, Archival ethics, Enviromental ethics, Reproductive ethics Genetic ethics, and
Most recent terminology[(Some post-Internet?] (a small sample):
Internet ethics, Cyberethics, Healthcare and technology ethics.
So what does all this mean? Terminology can mean territory--claiming a piece of the discourse pie. Terminology can invite others to share in the discussion or can exclude those whose preferred terminology is different. I've always liked the term Information ethics because it seems to me to be a wide gate inviting in all who would enter. I've called IE an umbrella term. To me this is more important than claiming a small piece of what is a very important pie. I want to chew on the whole pie and not just a small piece. Seems like there are such serious and important issues--intellectual property, privacy, socially responsible Internet use, dealing with information poverty, with censorship, and with challenges to civil rights through information control-- that we don't need to spend too much time promoting our terms if it takes away from our making the important intellectual and social progress so needed today. I'd suggest that you pay attention to the terminology as a way to understand the many voices singing in the chorus. But mostly look at the issues underneath and what all this means to you.
-

Monday, January 31, 2005

Blogs as an information source--Thanks for the question.

A real question from a real reader:
What do you feel will be the long term effect of spamming comment sections on blogs and bogus blogs as linkfarms on the credibility of the Blog as an information source?

From the Information Ethicist: I'm fairly new to blogging so I'm not very familiar with blogs and spamming and bogus blogs. Tell me more. I do think that blogs are a great means for communication certain kinds of information. To me it fits into what is usually talked about as "the social life of information." We're just in the beginning stages for understanding how to use blogs, email, listservs, web pages, etc. in building communities with common interests, for fun, for political activity, and, I'm sure, lots more. My own personal reasons for starting this blog are my interests (1.) in finding other people interested in ethics and information and (2.) in having a place to express my thoughts on information ethics and related subjects. I've been working in this research area for almost fifteen years. Thanks again for writing. Tell me more about your interests in blogging and blogs as information sources.

Friday, January 28, 2005

Ask the Information Ethicist: An Invitation

Ask the Information Ethicist
This is an invitation for you to post your questions here in the comments section. I'd love to hear from you. If you wish to be anonymous, you can make an anonymous post. If you prefer to contact me personally, use my email at msmith@infoethics.org

Thursday, January 27, 2005

Budget Cutting in Libraries-- Can We Keep the Doors Open?

Can We Keep the Doors Open?
From a reader: Dear Information Ethicist: Take a look at this news item. The Free Library of Philadelphia has laid off more librarians and will not be able to staff libraries with professonal librarians all the time, but the doors of more libraries will be open on Saturdays. What do you think?

News Item, January 21, 2005
Philadelphia Announces Cuts in Hours, StaffFour branches of the Free Library of Philadelphia begin half-day service January 24, the first of 20 branches to move to an afternoon-only schedule as part of a cost-cutting reorganization. In addition, 13 librarians and four library administrators were among 200 city employees sent layoff notices January 10.
Officials say the changes will allow all 55 city libraries to offer Saturday hours and be open during peak-use times. “What we are trying to do is target when the libraries are used the most,” said Dan Fee, Mayor John F. Street’s spokesman, in the January 15 Philadelphia Inquirer. Only 10 libraries are currently open on Saturdays, and between July and December last year, libraries were closed for a total of 734 hours because of staffing shortages, officials said.
But library supporters worry about eliminating librarian positions and say the changes will hurt the system, the Inquirer reported January 20. “If library usage is low in some communities, then we should be working harder to increase patronage, not shortening hours,” said Amy Dougherty, executive director of the Friends of the Free Library of Philadelphia.
Library Director Elliot Shelkrot acknowledged that branches moving to half-day service would not have librarians on staff, but said that if needed, patrons with reference questions could be referred to a librarian at a nearby branch. “This is much better library service than we have going on today,” he said.
Posted January 21, 2005.


Dear Concerned Reader: Budget cuts in libraries are always difficult. In this case, the decision is to keep the libraries open even though there will not be professional librarians on duty. In fact, librarians have been cut all over the system to permit the doors to stay open. Concerned Reader, there is no easy answer to this problem--so common now in LibraryLand. But note that this is nothing new. Even in times of prosperity, libraries are often staffed by support staff and in colleges by students. The larger issue is money--isn't it always. How can we provide the excellent services our patrons deserve if we have to keep cutting staff? How do we make the library more visible and librarians a more appreciated group in our world? The time is right for us to do all we can. See the efforts of the American Library Association and their plans for National Library Week and other campaigns http://www.ala.org
Your Devoted Information Ethicist

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

The Information Ethicist--Thanks

Welcome to The Information Ethicist. My sincere thanks to my daughter April of http://aprilcr.blogspot.com for showing me the power of blogging. Thanks go also to so many people. I know that I can only remember some of them today.

*To Robert Hauptman--Bob--who served on my dissertation committee and believed in the vision of Information Ethics as a vital field to address the many challenges of information & communications technologies in our professional lives, in public policy, and in the personal decision-making of all of us. His contributions in the Journal of Information Ethics are immeasurable.

*To Rafael Capurro for inspiring me through his writings and friendship over many years
and continue to encourage so many of us through the International Center for Information Ethics http://icie.zkm.de and now with the new Journal of International Information Ethics

*To Toni Carbo for renewing my faith that I could continue my research in Information Ethics and for being a pioneer in building the field at the University of Pittsburgh

*To the early students at North Carolina Wesleyan who showed me the real- world side of business and professional ethics

*To the students in my first Information Ethics class at the University of North Carolina--Chapel Hill who jumped into the midst of my explorations of this as a vital area in the curriculum of library and information science

*To my wonderful friends at Saint Mary's College Library in Raleigh, North Carolina. For our years together on the staff when they supported me in becoming an information ethicist and helped me to pursue the doctoral degree at UNC-CH and for so many acts of kindness and love to me, to April, and to the good of so many. They are angels. They were and continue to be the ones who joined with me in practicing subversive ethics.

*To all of those who have invited me to speak to their groups through the years and to learn so much from them. In the library community--ALA (American Library Association), PLA (Public Library Association), Ohio librarians, medical librarians, librarians in Croatia, university librarians and adminstrators at Yale, Georgia librarians, and many more.

And so many more.....Stay tuned.

So what is Information Ethics and why should I care? Again stay tuned but for now look at the blog description.

Blog Description: Ask the Informaiton Ethicist questions about your concerns about the uses and abuses of information, information and communications technologies, professional ethics in the information fields (librarianship, information sciences and systems, resarch, biomedical/genetic information, and all kinds of issues in moral values and public policy).