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Collaborate for an Ethical CyberspaceOne of my interests is philosophy, and in particular epistemology and ethics . I provide an invited presentation to the Australian Defence College twice a year titled – “Rwanda: A Case Study in Ethical and Leadership Dilemmas ” . The key points of the presentation are:
But I digress. Pat Byrne sent me this link to the Carnegie Council website , which is a great resource for anyone interested in ethics. (A good Australian resource is the St James Ethics Centre ). What caught my attention was the Ethical Blog Project , which naturally has its own blog called “The Ethical Blogger ”. Apparently this blog attracts thousands of visitors a day, and has been nominated by Google as a blog of note. I’ve added it to my bookmarks. Coincidentally David Snowden has a blog today about cyber-vandalism on Wikipedia called Anonymity - I also blogged a couple of days ago about cyber-vandalism. It seems to me the Ethical Blog Project has a lot to offer the blogosphere and online collaboration communities such as Wikepedia. I can say it no better than the Carnegie Council – "We are trying to encourage civility in the blogosphere because blogs have the power to do good, giving voice to the voiceless and shining a spotlight on corruption, human rights abuses, or environmental degradation. … if unethical blogging gets out of hand, governments will step in and regulate. Let's not let a few bad apples spoil it for the rest of us. Technology guided by ethics can help create a better world." I couldn’t agree more! Ethics in all spheres of life matter. Regards, Graham
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Confusion about what data, information, and knowledge are – how they differ, what the words mean – has resulted in enormous expenditures on technology initiatives that rarely deliver what the firms spending the money needed or thought they were getting. |