CS 301 Computer Ethics
Term paper
Final paper due Friday, 12 April 2024. (Last day of our class is April 9, ideally, bring it then)
I want a topic choice, a tentative abstract, an outline and some
references, handed in by Tuesday, 19 March 2024 (That is
after spring break, and
4 weeks before the paper is due.)
You are entitled to present outlines and drafts for review or
comment at any time, and I encourage you to do so. I also advise
consulting the Writing Centre for more expert advice.
Guidelines
Some appropriate guidelines for a research paper, authored by
Prof. Keith Baxter [Bax 02], are to be found on Essay instructions.doc
by clicking here.
In particular they call for a title
page
with 100 word abstract, text with 1.5 line spacing, 12
pt. type, and a page of references, in alphabetical order by
author. The form for both print and Internet references is spelled
out. Examples below. Refer to them in the text by
(author, year, page) in
line with the text (rather than with footnotes at the
bottom of the page.) I expect you to have several references and
to actually refer to them in your text. Avoid the heartache of
plagiarism, Be sure to put the
words of others in "quotation marks" and give the reference.
There are also style sheets available at the library.
For one of the topics below, please research the topic, reading
any books, journal articles, or on-line resources that seem
relevant, and write an essay of 2000-2500 words (about 5-7 pages
of text) exploring the ethical implications of the topic. You
should identify issues and present reasoned arguments supporting
more than one point of view, then you may favor one side, or
conclude that individuals must choose between competing
alternatives.
A good way to structure the argument is to build the strongest
case you can manage for the opposing point of view, and then argue
from your favorite ethical theory (Maximize happiness, universal
rules, social contract, information ethics) in favor of your
solution.
Research paper suggestions
In the textbook there are many suggestions for research topics. Any one of
these would be acceptable.
Or one of these topics
In all topics, Please base your
opinions on some ethical theory. For each topic area,
narrow down to a more specific problem.
- Big Data is Watching You!
What data storage and "mining" capabilities exist, what can they
do, with your digital footprint? Who profits from analyzing your
digital footprint, and should you care?
- Big Brother too!: Government
surveillance
now exceeds anything that George Orwell imagined. How ethical is
that?
-
Right to Childhood Children get exposed to technology very young. How does this affect their lives and imagination? How safe are they?
Is there time to play? How should parents deal with this?
- Tracking people: Any
cell phone that is turned on broadcasts its identity to nearby
towers. This reveals where your phone, and presumably you, are.
Likewise, a small computer that attempts to connect to wireless
internet also reveals your location, a fact exploited by
airports in Canada to track people. A car equipped with GPS and
Interned can give you traffic updates. But it can also be
tracked, and hacked. What about this? Advantages, privacy
concerns?
- Controlling the Internet:
It was built as a distributed system, with very little
centralized control (fundamentally only the assignment of unique
"IP addresses"). Is it out of hand? Can problems be solved with
some sort of control, either central or distributed,
cooperatively or individualistically? (Now, if you don't think
spam, viruses, pornography, fraud or anything else is a problem,
you shouldn't pick this topic.)
- Self-driving cars:
They are supposed to be safer than the average drunk, distracted
or texting driver. But if they get into an accident, who is
responsible? The owner? the car company? The programmers?
Suppose a bug in code your wrote is blamed for an accident.
- A Charter of Robot Rights
and Responsibilities: Once computer systems are
able to pass the Turing test, "be indistinguishable for human
beings in conversation," what rights need to be accorded to
them, and particularly to autonomous robots of which a computer
is the intelligence? The author Isaac Asimov had a
love-hate relationship with the idea of robots, and long ago
proposed "Three laws of robotics." What about rights for the
robots? Controls on robots? Roots as slaves? Votes for Robots?
- Human-machine symbiosis:
What does it mean to be human in a bionic age? What does (or
should) the future hold for our tool-making species and the
electronics we may become bonded with? Do you want your body and
brain enhanced with calculating and communication capabilities?
Who is in charge then?
- Uses of new knowledge:
For what we create, are we
ethically entitled to recognition, money, or control? Should
there be laws "protecting" our intellectual output, or are we be
ethically obliged to share new knowledge and creative work?
(Possible focus on Free vs. Proprietary Software, or on-line
sharing of journal articles.) Does "Copyright" still make sense
in the electronic age? Perhaps we need different rules for
different types of creative activity.
- The "dark" Internet:
I have heard that there are many more "sites" on the web than
can be found by Google, because they are engaged in some kind of
illicit activity. Umm, probably I don't want to know about them.
But is this a problem?
- Super-intelligence and A.I. : It can be noted that
computer systems and software evolve in a similar way as
biological systems. (Wordperfect is being out-competed, PC-Write
is extinct, while TCP/IPv4 is a dominant force, like the
dinosaurs, preventing anything more rational from taking
hold...)
Meanwhile the power of computer hardware is increasing
exponentially (Moore's law.) Thus it seems likely (Ray Kurzweil,
"The Singularity is Near") that a super-intelligence could
evolve beyond humanity's power to control or even comprehend.
Where does this leave us?
- On-line voting: Can we achieve greater democracy by
allowing people to vote from the comfort of their homes? Can the
requirements of secret ballot, and one person, one vote be both
met? How can an honest vote be ensured?
- Bitcoin and the Environment: Bitcoin mining - finding new "hashes" -
is energy intensive.
At one point Hydro Quebec declared a moratorium after receiving requests for power allocations exceeding 1/4 of its generating capacity.
More recently, Hydro Sherbrooke gave a good deal to Bitfarms, who moved into the hockey stick factory, and have caused noise pollution from the cooling fans needed. Is this energy use justified?
Other topic:
You need not be limited by my imagination, so if you
want to propose another topic for your term paper, do so, and ask
for approval.
Reference style examples
Baxter, Keith 2002 Economics Essay Instructions, Bishop's
University,
URL="https://cs.ubishops.ca/ljensen/ethics/Economics Essay
instructions.doc"
Orwell, George 1949 Nineteen Eighty-four, Martin, Secker &
Warburg Ltd, London
References can be numbered, or else preceded by the abbreviation
used for the reference, e.g. [Bax 02] or [Orw 49]
Document prepared by Lin Jensen , Bishop's University ,