ITM434 - Bus. Ethics and Soc. Issues in Cmptng Module 5 - Case

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ITM434 - Bus. Ethics and Soc. Issues in Cmptng

Module 5 - Case

The revolutionary impacts of IT

It would have been hard to miss this picture had you been scanning the newspapers during the tumultuous February of 2011, when the long-standing Mubarak regime in

Egypt was swept from power by a popular uprising ultimately aligned with the military.

The image of urban chaos being calmly photographed by a participant with a cell phone is completely emblematic of this most IT-inspired and IT-managed popular revolution to date, Actually, credit for originating this development probably goes the Iranian people, but the Egyptians were the first to actually pull it off. Contrary to Gil Scott-Heron's

assertion, the revolution was televised -- along with being tweeted, facebooked, emailed,

iphotoed, and generally stage-managed with the full range of currently available information and communication technologies.

But this wasn't just a user-driven revolution; at least a part of the IT industry -- most specifically, Google -- actively joined in the event, particularly as a result of the central role played in events in Egypt by a Google executive named Wael Ghonim. Here is a useful summary of his involvement, that wound up dragging the company and some of its satellites into the process:

Agencies (2011, February 10). Google executive's role in Egypt a corporate dilemma. Al Arabiya News Channel. Retrieved from

http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/02/10/137046.html

http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/02/10/137046.html

Eventually, the traditional media awoke to the role being played by IT and the succesful efforts to get around the limits on the

Internet attempted by the regime, and it became a prime focus for the mandatory post-revolutionary media processing of the events:

Shane, S. (2011, January 29). Spotlight again falls on web tools and change. New York Times Week in Review. Retrieved from

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/30/weekinreview/30shane.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

So where does all this fit into ethical discourse? Well, large-scale social discord, even in the pursuit of liberty and democracy, must certainly be considered as a situation full of potential ethical dilemmas. Who gets do do what, to whom, when, and under what justification? How do the various parties adjudicate rights and responsibilities? To what degree is it permitted to violate laws, ignore generally accepted social norms, and even use physical force in pursuit of one's goals? And most particularly, to what degree ought outside parties such as foreign companies get involved in domestic political affairs, either to support or oppose the revolution? In

Egypt in January and February 2011, these weren't just academic questions posed idly by a professor; they were deadly serious issues faced every moment by a fair chunk of the world.

It's easy to come down on the side of democracy against authoritarianism when you're safely across a couple of oceans; by this perspective, Google looks like a major international hero. But consider the precedent; how would most Americans react to the

prospect of an international corporate player such as the German IT firm SAP deciding to support striking teachers in Madison Wisconsin by jiggering the local telecom net? Not likely -- but certainly well wihin the bounds of the permissible, by Google's standards.

The IT profession and corporate infrastructure has been ramping up its use of the rhetoric of "revolution" for quite some time now.

Even lawyers can be swept up in this tide; see for example:

Sheperd, J. (2010, January 11) Ethics. The Client Revolution. Retrieved from http://www.clientrevolution.com/ethics/

When the rhetoric of the "IT revolution" becomes part and parcel of political revolutions, a major dividing line has been crossed. And

IT managers must begin to assume the ethical responsibilities for the consequences wrought by their products. The major armaments manufacturers in Europe and America were rightly castigated after the First World War for their irresponsible encouraging of the international arms race before 1914 in pursuit of corporate profits; the phrase "merchants of death" was quite literally applied.

Is this a precedent that we ought to begin enforcing on today's purveyors of revolution-facilitating toys?

Review the above resources dealing with the Egyptian situation and the rhetorical climate within which it evolved. Feel absolutely free to follow these up with any other sources that you find informative in helping you to make your case in a short paper in response to the following question:

Is it ethical for IT vendors such as Google to promote the use of their information technology products in pursuit of political revolutions in various countries?

EXPECTATIONS:

Your paper should be between three and five pages. Take a definite stand on the issues, and develop your supporting argument carefully. Using material from the background information and any other sources you can find to support specific points in your argument is highly recommended; try to avoid making assertions for which you can find no support other than your own opinion.

Make sure to spell out the utilitarian and deontological considerations involved, and distinguish between them.

Be sure to provide proper citations for any material you reference from other sources! See the TUI Guidedlines and/or the Purdue

University Guide cited in the background information for Module 1 if you are unsure as to how proper citations work.

Module Page https://cdad.trident.edu/CourseHomeModule.aspx?course=711&term=1...

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