NAB
You create with technology everyday; we write about technology. But have you ever stopped and thought about the ethics behind the tech?
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/does-your-use-of-technology-carry-ethical-weight/
Didn’t think so, and perhaps you don’t need to but armchair
philosopher Michael Sacasas blogging at The Convivial Society has a few
thoughts for your ear.
“The failure to seriously consider how new technologies might be weaponized reveals a stunning degree of either naivete, hubris, or recklessness.”
To be clear, he is not aiming the barb at media &
entertainment. His comments are directed at the use of technology in society at
large.
He is prompted to speak having realised, he says, that
different sectors talking about technology shared a common characteristic – “in
each case they either expressed bewilderment or an expressed admission of
obliviousness about the possibility that a given tech would be put to
destructive or nefarious purposes.”
Sacasas is also not suggesting that your digital camera is
in danger of becoming a lethal weapon (although of course terrorist groups like
Al-Qaeda made sure its torture porn went viral using digital filmmaking
techniques).
He is suggesting that no technology is benign and that
“worst case malevolent uses are not the only kinds of morally significant
aspects of our technology worth our consideration.”
He argues, not without reason, that society is “deeply
invested in the belief that technology is ethically neutral if not, in fact, an
unalloyed good” and therefore accepts all tech advances without question.
That’s not the case with Artificial Intelligence where the
likes of Elon Musk have ensured that the ethical dilemmas of creating human sims are at least
pondered.
Musk has fewer qualms about space rockets though - a
technology that Sacasas would ask the billionaire to re-consider given its
seismically negative impact on the resources of planet Earth.
Sacasas is tapping into (is arguably a forerunner of) the
wider meme concerning tech ethics. There are even academic courses on the subject.
In fact, the ethical use of technology, or ethical
tech, is inextricably linked to, and an extension of, tech-savviness.
According to Brenna Sniderman, Leader, Center for Integrated
Research at Deloitte being tech-savvy means more than being able to define use cases for cloud or AI
- it extends to understanding some of the potential ethical dilemmas that
designing or using these technologies can present.
“Indeed, to be truly savvy in the age of advanced,
connected, and autonomous technologies, leaders should think beyond designing
and implementing technologically driven capabilities. They should consider how
to do so responsibly from the start.”
Sacasas would agree, blogging that the tech industry is deeply invested in the belief that technology is
ethically neutral.
“If technology is ethically neutral, then those who design,
market, and manufacture technology cannot be held responsible for the
consequences of their work. Moreover, we are, as consumers, more likely to
adopt new technologies if we are wholly untroubled by ethical considerations.
If it occurred to us that every device we buy was a morally fraught artifact,
we might be more circumspect about what we purchase.”
Anyway, as a way of probing the issue further, Sacasas has
filed a set of 40 questions that may or may not cause you to reconsider your
daily dose of tech. The full list is at The Convivial Society and includes:
What sort of person will the use of this technology make of
me?
How will the use of this technology affect my experience of
time?
How will the use of this technology affect how I relate
to other people?
What was required of the earth so that I might be able to
use this technology?
Does my use of this technology encourage me to view others
as a means to an end?
Does using this technology require me to think more or less?
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