Engineering Ethics ECE/CS 252, Fall 2010 Prof. Mikko

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Engineering Ethics ECE/CS 252, Fall 2010 Prof. Mikko Lipasti Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Wisconsin – Madison

Engineering Ethics Ethics Issues of right and wrong; morality Very broad, complex, and personal topic This not the time or the place; happy to discuss this off-line Engineering Ethics Right and wrong with respect to engineering practice Consider effects of your professional decisions and actions Direct effects, e.g. Legal Safety and well-being of others Legal/judicial consequences Ethica Indirect effects, e.g. l Profitability of your employer; stockholders’ rights Your financial security 2

Why Study Engineering Ethics? [M. Pritchard 1992] 1. Stimulate the Moral Imagination What if, role reversal, empathy 2. Recognizing Ethical Situations Know when to tread carefully and deliberately 3. Developing Analytical Skills Some tools to help you work through gray areas 4. Eliciting a Sense of Responsibility Don’t pass the buck 5. Tolerating Disagreement and Ambiguity Reasonable people can differ; not everything is black and white 3

Key Concepts: Factual/Conceptual/Ethical [ethics.tamu.edu] Example scenario Employee moves from Company A to Company B, but has signed a contract to not disclose proprietary information. At B, she finds a new way to apply a technique she learned of at company A. This will lead to a better, safer product for B, and will not affect A, since they are in a different line of business. Should she disclose the technique to B? What issues are factual? Clear true and false Here: better, safer product Facts not always as easy to ascertain Nevertheless, once known, should be unambiguous Can usually be resolved by investigation or empirical research 4

Key Concepts: Factual/Conceptual/Ethical [ethics.tamu.edu] Example scenario Employee moves from Company A to Company B, but has signed a contract to not disclose proprietary information. At B, she finds a new way to apply a technique she learned of at company A. This will lead to a better, safer product for B, and will not affect A, since they are in a different line of business. Should she disclose the technique to B? What issues are conceptual? A matter of definition What does proprietary information mean? What constitutes use of proprietary information? All partiesmust come to some agreement (consensus) Lawyers/judges/courts often get involved 5

Key Concepts: Factual/Conceptual/Ethical [ethics.tamu.edu] Example scenario Employee moves from Company A to Company B, but has signed a contract to not disclose proprietary information. At B, she finds a new way to apply a technique she learned of at company A. This will lead to a better, safer product for B, and will not affect A, since they are in a different line of business. Should she disclose the technique to B? What issues are moral or ethical? A matter of principles Which moral principles are relevant? Here, theft of intellectual property If more than one conflict, does one outweigh the other(s)? What if B’s products are failing in life-threatening ways without this technique? Doing no harm now conflicts with theft 6

Moral/Ethical Principles Vary widely across cultures, individuals Something you ultimately have to decide for yourself Don’t reinvent the wheel Careful about legal vs. ethical conflicts You may think it’s ethical, but employer must do what’s legal Possible starting points: Political: Bill of Rights, Constitution Religious: Ten Commandments, Golden Rule Judicial: Common Law traditions and precedent 7

Applying Moral/Ethical Rules [ethics.tamu.edu] Analyze a continuum of analogous situations Moral rule: "People should not steal (or commit theft)." 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Breaking into a store and taking 3000 in merchandise. "Borrowing" a friend's car and failing to return it. Taking a bicycle that someone had forgotten to lock. Developing a computer program on company time for your company, and then patenting a considerably improved version of the program under your own name. Borrowing a book from a friend, keeping it by mistake for a long time and then failing to return it. (You discover the book after your friend has moved away, and you decide to keep it.) Using some ideas you developed at Company A for a very different chemical process at Company B. Using some management techniques at Company B that were developed at Company A. Picking up a quarter that you saw someone drop on the street. Failing to return a sheet of paper (or paper clip) you borrowed Picking up a quarter that someone (you don't know who) has dropped on the street. 8

Example: IEEE Code of Ethics IEEE: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Professional organization for EEs, CMPEs, CS professionals Code of ethics established in Feb. 2006 We, the members of the IEEE, in recognition of the importance of our technologies in affecting the quality of life throughout the world, and in accepting a personal obligation to our profession, its members and the communities we serve, do hereby commit ourselves to the highest ethical and professional conduct and agree: 1.to accept responsibility in making decisions consistent with the safety, health and welfare of the public, and to disclose promptly factors that might endanger the public or the environment; 2.to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interest whenever possible, and to disclose them to affected parties when they do exist 9

Example: IEEE Code of Ethics 3. to be honest and realistic in stating claims or estimates based on available data; 4. to reject bribery in all its forms; 5. to improve the understanding of technology, its appropriate application, and potential consequences; 6. to maintain and improve our technical competence and to undertake technological tasks for others only if qualified by training or experience, or after full disclosure of pertinent limitations; 7. to seek, accept, and offer honest criticism of technical work, to acknowledge and correct errors, and to credit properly the contributions of others; 10

Example: IEEE Code of Ethics 8. to treat fairly all persons regardless of such factors as race, religion, gender, disability, age, or national origin; 9. to avoid injuring others, their property, reputation, or employment by false or malicious action; 10. to assist colleagues and co-workers in their professional development and to support them in following this code of ethics. 11

Some Useful Rules and Tools Principle of informed consent Assume that people will act in their own best interest Ultimately an individual is responsible for his/her own welfare Ethical rule: Full disclosure to enable informed decisions Golden rule Do unto others as you would have them do to you Pitfalls (don’t rat out a bad engineer since you don’t want to get ratted out) The “New York Times” test Would you want to read about what you did on the front page? Utilitarianism and Rights of Persons Analyze to find “best net outcome” or “least violation of rights” 12

Utilitarian and Rights of Persons Analyses Procedure Identify all those affected by an ethical decision Weight effects on all stakeholders for each outcome Consider sum of weights; choose the best outcome Problems How do you weight intangibles? How do you weight effects on others vs. effects on you? What are relative values of different “rights” Can lead to bad conclusions Must be applied carefully and judiciously Nevertheless can be a useful tool for analysis Can help you find a “third way” (alternative solution/outcome) 13

Example Scenario 1 You are developing a device driver for a USB webcam. While testing it you find that it crashes Windows unpredictably about once a week. Should you release it? With what, if any warnings? Who is affected and how? Company/shareholders: profitability, short- vs. long-term Customers: critical/urgent need vs. safety issues Third parties: how are your customers using these? ATM security camera You and your dependents: employment, income, liability 14

Example 2: Therac-25 Radiation therapy machine in use from 1982 Software (computer) controlled, few hardware safety interlocks Multiple design errors and safety mechanism failures One related to arithmetic overflow, which disabled safety interlock Led to at least 6 radiation overdoses, 3 patients died Conclusions Insufficient resources to develop software (1 engineer) Insufficient testing, inappropriate reuse of prev-gen control software Initial denial, slow reaction to reports of problems 15

Example 3: Google Image Search Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing in 1987 Google image search (images.google.com) 16

Example 3: Google Image Search Google image search (images.google.cn in 2006) 17

Example 3: Google Image Search Imagine you worked at Google and your manager ordered you to implement this feature (censorship). What would you do? 1. Resign in protest? 2. Just do it? 3. Do it, but leak info to the press? 4. ? Who is affected by your decision and how? Google & shareholders (profits) You & dependents (employment, income) Google users in China Deprived of true history Also could be deprived of any access to Google 18

Engineering Ethics: Summary Engineering Ethics Right and wrong with respect to engineering practice Differentiating between Factual, Conceptual, and Moral Moral Principles Help detect when something smells Guide ethical decision-making Analysis of Conflicting Principles Identify those affected Consider direct and indirect effects of your professional decisions and actions Bottom line: sometimes there are no easy answers 19

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