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codes of conduct for computing professionals
(Gotterbarn, 1991). Internet and the Web put
humanity in front of ethical issues at global scale.
Think about the problem of laws in cyberspace,
where are the borders? Or all the issues related to e-
business where financial transactions are taking
place in global networks; or the effects on cultures
and traditions of a global education; not to mention
the digital divide among different areas of the planet.
Also, a growing attention is now dedicated to the
environmental impact of ICT: how to select
environmental-friendly hardware platforms? How to
minimize their power consumption? How to manage
the disposal of hardware devices at the end of their
life?
2.2 The Challenges for Information
Systems Management
Information Systems (IS) Management is a very
young area compared to other fields that have
developed well defined "Code of Ethics" (law,
medicine). Also, here we have an "ethical gap": ICT
are evolving at such a speed that we had no time to
develop guidelines for addressing the social and
ethical issues that ICT creates. In order to develop a
consistent framework that could help IS Managers in
dealing with ethical dilemmas in their daily life, we
propose to develop a "bridge" between the corporate
"business ethics" and "computer ethics" strategies
starting with a collection of guidelines. An
information system is relatively easy to use and
access, so committing a "victim-less crime", is easy.
If you have the credentials to access some
applications, then you better have a strong ethical
background otherwise the temptation to just click on
a screen is too higher: many computer crimes are
from insiders. E-business is global by definition and
now we have a world of more than 2.2 Billion users
interconnected (Internetworldstats, 2012). In many
areas we have difficulties in defining what law to
apply. For example privacy has very different
legislations in US and EU, so we need special
agreements for data crossing global networks
(Garante, 2012). Without an ICT infrastructure an e-
business simply does not exist, it cannot operate. In
this perspective the responsibility of IS managers is
evolving and escalating towards the highest levels.
The complexity and rapid evolution of ICT put the
management in front of true ethical dilemmas where
the decision between "right" or "wrong" is difficult
and now it is clear the need for a "computer ethics".
2.3 A Collection of Guidelines
A basic recommendation could be to have a good
knowledge of computing infrastructures inside an e-
business organization: a good knowledge of
computing solutions and of the related social,
environmental and ethical impacts can provide the
skills for a good responsible and sustainable e-
business, an alignment between business ethics
(know-what) and computer ethics (know-how). In the
following we provide a collection of guidelines.
1. Participatory design: the design of ICT
applications should start from the involvement of
people that will daily use the systems. The persons
that actually know and implements the business
flows and processes should be involved since the
beginning in the design of ICT solutions. This will
also ensure a good acceptance of the new working
environments; 2. workplace: a responsible e-
business will give particular attention to the design
of the working environment, to its safety and
ergonomics. It will provide also flexible solutions to
information workers like: tele-working and flexible
working time. Another hot issue is the personal use
of corporate computing resources; 3. hardware and
the environment: here the organization can really
make a difference by carefully selecting the
hardware suppliers that minimize the environmental
impact; 4. software: free or proprietary? It is now
well recognized the role of free and open source
software in the development of "local" software
companies (for customization and maintenance) and
a responsible e-business strategy should be aware of
this dimension. If the organization is going towards
"cloud computing" solutions, then it should ask to
cloud providers evidence of their choices (for
example, in the direction of Green IT); 5. open
formats: are data models based on open standards?
(in case of an e-business working also with public
authorities this "open data" approach is becoming
mandatory); 6. privacy: a good strategy could be to a
adopt a "minimalist" approach to the use of data; for
example to use only the minimum amount of data
required to process transactions. All personal data
should be available to their owners (the "habeas
data" approach) (Rodotà, 2004), and this is more
and more important also on mobile platforms (Van
Sinderen, 2006); 7. a responsible customer
relationship management: clear policies about data
mining and the use of customers' profiles should be
defined and published; 8. security and reliability:
these two issues should be among the top priorities
for a responsible e-business. For example a proper
use of "ethical hackers" (security experts that help
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