Lot of talk in recent days about tech ethics. I want to talk about what ethics is and isn't in other fields.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
When we talk about the ethics of tech, a lot of people flock to things like the trolley problem. This is utterly irrelevant.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
Tech works really hard to try to craft ethical dilemmas that don't exist in the real world. This is because it wants to derail.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
Ethical dilemmas--which arise when two valid ethical frameworks collide--are relatively rare. Tech doesn't have many of these.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
Instead, what it has is "profit vs. ethics". "We will make less money if we act ethically." But revenue is not an ethical concern!
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
The tech industry just has a lack of ethics. That's it. And lots of folks trying to craft a trolley problem to mask their accountability.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
In fields that also address this problem, such as medicine, we approach ethical concerns with various tools: review boards, certifications
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
A lawyer can get disbarred, a doctor can lose their board certification, a professor can lose research funding.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
Tell me: where is the equivalent of that in tech?
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
the flipside is that you can get hired in tech without being certified by degrees & associations, which is worth preserving…
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absolutely! IMO this is an obligation of seniority, and senior engineers/managers should be trained in these matters
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