Choose one of the following case studies from this weeks materials:
Identify and reflect on one ethical dilemma that stood out to you. Think about why this dilemma is difficult to resolve when legal rules, technological systems, and human values interact.
In your post:In your post:Should be 3 pages not including cover and reference Please No Plagiariism, no a i. no chat bots original work Please.
- State which scenario or case study you chose.
(You will use the same scenario for this weeks assignment.) - Briefly describe the ethical dilemma and explain why it matters.
- Reflect on the complexity of the situation.
- What makes the issue difficult or controversial?
- Consider how legal rules, technical limitations, and human impacts may conflict.
- Who benefits from the technology involved in the case?
- Who might be harmed or disadvantaged?
- Is the issue mainly legal, ethical, or both?
- Could different stakeholders view the issue differently?
- Defining Ethics, Law, and TechnologyThis week, we focus on the basic language of ethics and its relationship to law and technology. You will read about key concepts such as ethics, morals, virtues, integrity, and stakeholders, while also examining how legal rules differ from ethical responsibilities. By the end of the reading, you should be able to explain the distinction between ethical and legal issues in technology and identify why critical thinking is necessary when technology evolves faster than regulation.Reading TipsUse the guiding questions to support your reading.
The guiding questions are there to help you focus on key ideas, not just memorize definitions. Use them to:- Identify where important terms such as ethics, morals, law, and responsibility are introduced.
- Notice how the reading explains the difference between what is legal and what is ethical.
- Prepare for discussions by connecting the examples to current technology issues you have seen in daily life.
Other reading strategies you can include:
- Preview the reading before diving inscan headings and key terms first.
- Engage criticallyask yourself: Is this just legal, or is it also ethical?
- Relate the material to real lifethink about privacy policies, social media, AI, or apps you already use.
- Take notes in your own words so you can better distinguish between legal rules and ethical responsibilities.
- Use this to help you take notes.
Week 4 Chapter Reading: Defining Ethics, Law, and TechnologyIntroductionBefore we can analyze ethical issues in technology, we first need to understand the language used when discussing ethics. Words such as ethics, morals, values, responsibility, and law are often used interchangeably, but they do not mean the same thing. Careful ethical reasoning requires us to define these terms clearly so that we can communicate with precision and avoid confusion.Technology professionals frequently encounter situations where something is legally allowed but still raises ethical concerns. A company may comply with the law while still making choices that feel invasive, manipulative, or unfair. Understanding this distinction is important because ethical responsibility often extends beyond mere legal compliance. In technology, the question is not only Is this allowed? but also Is this right?Because modern technologies such as artificial intelligence, social media platforms, and large-scale data collection operate across entire populations, decisions made by designers, developers, and organizations can affect millions of people. Ethical reflection therefore becomes a necessary part of responsible technological practice, not an optional extra.Pause and Reflect
Think about a digital service you use often, such as a social media platform, shopping app, or streaming service. Can you identify one practice that is probably legal but still raises ethical concerns for you? What makes it feel ethically questionable?Why Ethics Matters in TechnologyTechnology is not neutral. Every technological system reflects decisions made by people, and those decisions shape how that technology affects individuals, communities, and society. Social media algorithms influence what information people see. Artificial intelligence can affect hiring and employment opportunities. Data collection systems determine how personal information is gathered, stored, and sold. Automation changes how work is performed and who may lose access to jobs or opportunities.Because technology can influence large populations, ethical reflection becomes critical in the design and use of technological systems. A system may be efficient, profitable, or legally compliant while still producing unfair outcomes. This is why computer ethics asks us to examine not only what technology does, but also whose interests it serves, whose needs it ignores, and whose risks it increases.Key Idea
Technology is rarely neutral. The design decisions made by developers and organizations shape how technology affects individuals, communities, and society.Why This Matters
Modern technologies operate at scale. A single design decision can affect thousands or millions of users. That means ethical problems can become systemic, shaping access, privacy, fairness, and power across entire communities.Key Ethical TerminologyEthics refers to principles and standards used to determine right and wrong behavior.Morals are personal beliefs about what is right or wrong.Virtues are positive character traits such as honesty, fairness, and courage.Integrity means acting consistently according to ethical principles.Stakeholders are the individuals or groups affected by a decision or technology.Corporate Social Responsibility is the idea that organizations should consider social and environmental consequences, not only profit, when making decisions.Ethical vs. LegalEthics and law are related, but they are not the same. Laws are formal rules created and enforced by governments. Ethics refers to broader principles about what people should do, even when the law is silent.Sometimes an action is both ethical and legal, such as protecting user data and respecting privacy. Sometimes an action is legal but unethical, such as collecting large amounts of personal data without meaningful transparency. Sometimes an action may be ethical but illegal, such as whistleblowing to expose harmful wrongdoing. And sometimes an action is both illegal and unethical, such as identity theft, cyber fraud, or unauthorized hacking.Key Idea
An action being legal does not automatically mean it is ethical. Technology professionals often need to evaluate the broader social impact of their decisions beyond what the law requires.
Ethical vs. Legal Matrix
Legal Illegal Ethical Ethical & Legal Actions that follow both moral principles and the law.
Example:
Protecting user data and respecting privacy.Ethical but Illegal Actions intended to prevent harm but that break the law.
Example:
Whistleblowing.Unethical Legal but Unethical Actions allowed by law but ethically questionable.
Example:
Excessive user data collection.Illegal & Unethical Actions that violate both law and ethics.
Example:
Hacking or identity theft.Think About It
Think about an app you use regularly, such as social media, shopping, or streaming.
What personal data does the company collect about you?
Do you think their practices are:
- Ethical and legal
- Legal but unethical
- Ethical but illegal
Explain why.Examples of Technology LawsThe reading highlights several examples of laws that attempt to regulate technology. In California, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) gives residents rights related to their personal information, including the right to know what data companies collect, request deletion of that data, and opt out of data sales. The California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) expands these protections and strengthens enforcement.At the federal level, laws such as the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), the Childrens Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) address unauthorized access, childrens privacy, and digital copyright issues.Internationally, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the European Union is one of the most influential privacy laws, requiring consent for data collection and granting people rights over their own information.When Laws Lag Behind TechnologyOne reason the distinction between ethics and law matters in technology is that technology often evolves faster than laws. Legal systems usually respond slowly, while technological innovation can spread rapidly. As a result, technology professionals often face situations where legal guidance is incomplete, outdated, or unclear.Real-World Example
The FacebookCambridge Analytica scandal involved personal data from millions of users being collected and used for political advertising without clear consent. Even though some practices were technically legal at the time, they raised serious ethical concerns about privacy and manipulation.Another example is facial recognition technology, which has been used for surveillance and identification in ways that many critics argue threaten privacy and can reinforce racial bias. Algorithmic bias in hiring systems offers another case: some AI systems have reproduced unfair patterns from historical data and created discriminatory outcomes, even before laws fully addressed those harms.These examples show why ethical reflection is necessary even when technology operates within legal boundaries. An organization may follow existing law and still create harm. Ethical reasoning helps us identify those harms earlier and more clearly.Critical Thinking and Personal LensesThe chapter closes by returning to a familiar idea from the previous week: personal lenses. Ethical decisions are often shaped by personal experiences, education, culture, and values. These lenses influence what people notice, what they consider harmful, and what solutions they find acceptable.Critical thinking requires us to analyze information carefully, recognize biases, define our terms, and consider multiple perspectives before making judgments. This skill is especially important in technology, where different groups may experience the same system in very different ways.Pause and Reflect
Choose one example from this chapter: data privacy, facial recognition, algorithmic hiring, or social media algorithms. What is one reason a person might see the issue mainly as a legal problem, and what is one reason another person might see it mainly as an ethical problem? What does that comparison reveal about the importance of critical thinking?Ultimately, understanding ethics, law, and technology begins with careful definitions and disciplined reasoning. Laws establish minimum rules for behavior, but ethics asks deeper questions about human dignity, fairness, responsibility, and social impact. In technology, where innovation often outruns regulation, ethical reasoning is essential for deciding not only what we can build, but what we should build.End of Chapter Key Terms
- Ethics Principles and standards used to determine right and wrong behavior.
- Morals Personal beliefs about what is right or wrong.
- Virtues Positive character traits such as honesty, fairness, and courage.
- Integrity Acting consistently according to ethical principles.
- Stakeholders Individuals or groups affected by a decision or technology.
- Corporate Social Responsibility The idea that companies should consider social and environmental impacts when making decisions.
- Law Rules created and enforced by governments to regulate behavior.
- ethical vs. legal The distinction between what is morally right and what is formally permitted by law.
- CCPA The California Consumer Privacy Act, which gives California residents rights related to personal data.
- CPRA The California Privacy Rights Act, which expands California privacy protections and enforcement.
- CFAA The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, a federal law addressing unauthorized access to computer systems.
- COPPA The Childrens Online Privacy Protection Act, which protects the personal data of children under 13 online.
- DMCA The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which addresses digital copyright and intellectual property protections.
- GDPR The General Data Protection Regulation, a major European Union privacy law.
The week’s topicTechnology Law and Policy: Ethical and Legal Challengesexplores how ethical principles apply to real-world privacy cases, focusing on consent, data protection, and the responsibilities of individuals and organizations in digital environments.
Watch: |
Guiding Questions
- How do we balance innovation in technology with the protection of individual rights?
- What does ethical responsibility look like in digital environments where actions are often invisible or automated?
- How can we tell when a technical solution is ethically soundnot just legally compliant?
Watch:
Guiding Questions
- What does privacy mean to you, and how do you see it changing in todays digital world?
- Why might it be important for people who build technology to study ethics?
- How could giving users more choices about their data help build trust between companies and customers?
Analysis: Scenarios / Case Studies
Review the following three scenarios. Briefly explore each one, then choose one scenario to use for both this week’s discussion and assignment. Once you select one, go into more depth by reviewing all the materials for that scenario.
At a Glance:
Schrems II was a major court case in Europe that changed how companies like Facebook and Google can move peoples personal data between countries. The court said U.S. laws did not protect European citizens privacy well enough, especially from government surveillance. This decision forced companies to rethink how they handle international data and raised big questions about how to protect privacy across borders.
Resources:
Guiding Questions:
- How did the Schrems II ruling challenge the adequacy of international data protection agreements like Privacy Shield?
- What ethical tensions arise when balancing national security interests with individual privacy rights?
- How should companies navigate conflicting legal obligations between jurisdictions while maintaining ethical data practices?
2.
At a Glance:
In Lane v. Facebook, users found out that Facebooks Beacon program was sharing their online purchases with friendswithout clear permission. Many people did not know this was happening, and it felt like a serious invasion of privacy. The case led to a lawsuit and showed how tech companies can cross ethical lines when they do not explain what they are doing with user data.
Resources:
Guiding Questions:
- In what ways did Facebooks Beacon program fail to uphold user consent, and what ethical principles were violated?
- How can platforms ensure transparency in data collection and sharing without overwhelming users with technical details?
- What responsibilities do companies have when designing systems that affect user privacyeven if users do not fully understand them?
3.
At a Glance:
This study looked at how privacy laws like and actually work in real life. It found that even when companies follow the rules, peopleespecially those from marginalized groupsoften still struggle to protect their privacy. The research shows that laws alone are not enough; we need better design and clearer tools to help everyone stay safe online.
Resources:
Guiding Questions:
- Why might legal compliance still fall short of protecting user privacy in practice?
- How can technology design better support users in understanding and managing their privacy choices?
- What responsibilities do organizations have to ensure privacy protections work fairly for all users, including marginalized groups?
Additional Resources

Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.