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Computer science faces an ethics crisis after Cambridge Analytica built a weapon

9 pointsby auxbussabout 7 years ago

1 comment

otakucodeabout 7 years ago
Why would someone publish an article like this?<p>&gt;I didn’t come up in computer science; I began my career as a physicist. That transition gave me a specific perspective on this situation. That the field of computer science, unlike other sciences, has not yet faced serious negative consequences for the work its practitioners do.<p>That right there should have eliminated the article entirely. First, most computer science courses include a course on ethics and how our industry affects peoples lives. If he&#x27;d come up in the CS world he would know that. Second, this is absolutely not anywhere near the first time CS has faced an ethics issue. There are classic cases I imagine everyone here went over in their ethics classes, like the cancer radiation machine with no failsafe that cooked people. The Boston &#x27;Big Dig&#x27; project. The Denver airport failures. Or how about the NSA doing anything within their power to use technology to build a real world Big Brother? (Too bad Orwell didn&#x27;t realize anyone paranoid enough to build a Big Brother apparatus would be too paranoid to ever actually use it.)<p>Engineers certainly need to start taking responsibility for the work they do. Moral responsibility. Because &#x27;I was just doing my job&#x27; does not fly. It is identical to &#x27;I only did it for money&#x27;. If that helps you understand how immature such a comment makes a person. And if they won&#x27;t do it themselves, everyone else will do it for them.<p>Those who work at Cambridge Analytica, or Google, or Facebook, or other &#x27;collect everything, exploit everything, never stop to consider consequences&#x27; companies are bad people, plain and simple. There are certainly those who work at those companies who didn&#x27;t work on those particular projects and they&#x27;re fine, but for those who built the tools to do this, they are bad human beings who actively made the world a worse place. And that they did it for money doesn&#x27;t really absolve them of responsibility. Especially in an industry like software where it&#x27;s so laughably easy to get another job that doesn&#x27;t involve aggressively stalking people in a seeming bid to build every dystopia written about since the dawn of the 20th century.