Using the new ACM code of ethics in decision making
Communications of the ACM
Ethics of Information Management
Ethics of Information Management
Ethics and information systems: Resolving the quandaries
ACM SIGMIS Database
ACM SIGCSE Bulletin
privacy perspective from utilitarianism and metaphysical theories
Current security management & Ethical issues of information technology
Supporting ethical problem solving: an exploratory investigation
Proceedings of the 2004 SIGMIS conference on Computer personnel research: Careers, culture, and ethics in a networked environment
A covenant with transparency: opening the black box of models
Communications of the ACM - Adaptive complex enterprises
Testing an ethical decision-making theory: the case of softlifting
Journal of Management Information Systems
Intelligent agent-supported knowledge management
International Journal of Computer Applications in Technology
Ensuring transparency in computational modeling
Communications of the ACM - Being Human in the Digital Age
Privacy is a process, not a PET: a theory for effective privacy practice
Proceedings of the 2012 workshop on New security paradigms
Hi-index | 48.22 |
The articles in this special section express a common theme; the use of information technology in society is creating a rather unique set of ethical issues that requires the making of new moral choices on the part of society and has spawned special implications for its members. Technology itself is not the only, nor necessarily the most responsible, cause of these issues. All ethical questions arise initially out of human agency. Technology, due to its capability to augment mental and physical powers of human beings, does stand in the role of a coconspirator. The hire of power-enhancing capabilities makes technology an inducer of sorts, a necessary but not sufficient underpinning to many of the ethical issues we face today.