The ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) had a code of ethics that really impress me. During my most recent read-through, I thought about how much it applies to me now that I am working at a company full-time. What caught my attention most is their section about honoring confidentiality. "The ethical concern is to respect all obligations of confidentiality to employers, clients, and users unless discharged from such obligations by requirements of the law or other principles of this Code." At my current job, I get customer's login credentials to different services in order to build them a customized integration with our web app. There is a lot of trust that goes into this, and I need to be very careful with how I handle their information.
I started this blog about 6 years ago, when I became a Master Burrito Ambassador for Chipotle. If you look at my oldest posts, that is all I wrote about. Then I went off to college and began writing about my freshman adventures. I took a hiatus from the blog for a long while, and am now back, giving my perspective on things I am learning in CS 404 - Ethics and Computing in Society at BYU.
Monday, December 08, 2014
Tuesday, December 02, 2014
Ethical Portrayal in Video Games
The fact that he is portrayed doing things that he is actually convicted of, seems to me like the lawsuit really should be dismissed. This raises a concern about ethics in video games. Where is the ethical boundary in video games portraying real people?
My position is that a video game is a work of art, and the creator should be free to portray people as he wishes, within reason. Once the portrayal becomes slanderous and legitimately damaging to someone's reputation, then I feel there are grounds to take action against such portrayal.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)