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Department of Computer Science City College of New York City College of New York Spring 2006 Copyright © 2006 by Abbe Mowshowitz CSc 375 SOCIAL ISSUES IN COMPUTING
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COURSE OVERVIEW A.Organization Readings assigned for each topic Two class sessions per topic Course reader available in CSc Dept. office (NAC 8/206) Read material before class Outline main points as study guide
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COURSE OVERVIEW B.Grading Midterm 20% Final 40% Term project 30% Class participation 10% Exams cover readings & lectures. Short answer & essay questions.
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COURSE OVERVIEW C.Project: individual Choose subject related to any topic covered in the course Subject should be specialized, i.e., not too broad Write a paper of 2500 words on the chosen subject
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COURSE OVERVIEW C.Project (cont.) Include a bibliography following format described on last page of course reader Bibliography must contain at least three scholarly articles Cite references in the body of the paper when appropriate
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COURSE OVERVIEW D. Aims and Content 1. Aims Raise awareness of computer professionals’ social responsibilities Present major arguments on controversial issues Provide conceptual tools for analyzing issues
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COURSE OVERVIEW D. Aims and Content 2. Justification Engineering ethics is part of engineering curriculum ABET requires inclusion of ethical & social issues in computer science courses Pervasive influence of computers and importance of professionals’ decisions
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COURSE OVERVIEW D. Aims and Content 3. Content Six parts Covering major contemporary social issues in computing
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content a. Responsibilities of Computer Professionals Topic 1. Accountability for software and systems (proper functioning of control programs for medical instruments; safety of robots; fault tolerance of securities trading systems; installation of appropriate safeguards) Topic 2. Ethical behavior in organizations (norms of employee behavior; policies to promote ethical skills; ‘ethical space’; codes of ethics)
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content b. Workplace and enterprise Topic 3. Jobs (employment projections; worker productivity; outsourcing) Topic 4. Working life (stress; workplace monitoring; rights and responsibilities of employers and employees) Topic 5. Virtual organization (characteristics; switching model; socio-technical foundations; implications)
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content c. Constraints and Vulnerability Topic 6. Constraints on development and deployment of computer systems (classification of constraints; examples from industry) Topic 7. Vulnerability in the information society (critical infrastructure; threats; risk assessment; security vs. freedom)
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content d. Privacy and Politics Topic 8. Computers and privacy (society vs. individual; nature of threat to personal privacy; fair information practice; legislation) Topic 9. Marketing and the Internet (profiling and targeting; tracking consumer behavior) Topic 10. Information technology and democracy (censorship; electronic voting and citizen participation; Internet governance)
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content e. Digital Libraries and social services Topic 11. Digital libraries (citizenship and access to information; preservation of information; quality of information on the Web; information haves and have-nots) Topic 12. Computers in education and health care (distance learning; virtual classroom; apatient management; telemedicine)
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COURSE OVERVIEW D.3. Content f. Human Relations Topic 13. Virtual communities (types of virtual communities; economics and politics of virtual communities) Topic 14. Human machines (humans vs. machines; challenge to human identity; living with robots)
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