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Computers and Society

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Title: Computers and Society


1
Computers and Society
2
Frog and Water
  • We tend to overlook the gradual changes around
    us, so fail to react in time to the threats that
    are in, as in the story of frog and boiling water.

3
Impacts by Design vs. Impacts not by Design
  • Impacts by design are the intended functions of
    designers of applications.
  • ATM and credit card over the world
  • Shopping online
  • Impacts not by design refer to the uses of
    applications which are not intended by the
    original designers.
  • Peoples whereabouts, commercial behavior, and
    political views can be traced.

4
Categories of Impacts
  • Quality of life Work life and social life
  • Security Computer crimes
  • Privacy
  • Ethics

5
Areas of Impacts
  • Business
  • Communication
  • Education
  • Warfare
  • Medicine
  • Art and music
  • The Handicapped

6
Two Articles
  • J. F. George, Introduction to the Social Issues
    of Computing.
  • On the impacts and issues at present.
  • Ray Kurzweil, The Impact On .
  • On the impacts and issues in the future.

7
Computer and Society- 1 -
  • Past and Present

8
Social Issues of ComputingPast and Present
  • J. F. George, Introduction to the Social Issues
    of Computing, 2003

9
Computing and Social Issues
  • It is FALSE to say
  • Computing has no relationship at all to the
    issues like homeless, poverty, hunger, and world
    peace.
  • We should not be as unawareness of the professor
    mentioned at the beginning of article about the
    impact of computing on society.

10
Employment
  • An issue we are familiar with.
  • Some old jobs are replaced some new jobs are
    created.
  • The promised cost savings by office automations
    were rarely realized, because (p.8) How do we
    understand this?

11
Sacrificing for Offspring?
  • For most of jobs displaced in the past 200 years,
    they caused pain on those who were displaced, but
    not on their offspring like us. We even rarely
    appreciated our ancestors for their sacrifices
    that lead to todays convenience and
    civilization.
  • Why do we complain today for our sacrifices
    that might be beneficial for our offspring?

12
Deskilling and Upskilling
  • Deskilling is the effect as the skills needed to
    do the job originally have been removed by the
    replaced computers, and jobs are of lesser
    interest and challenge.
  • Upskilling refers to the effects as jobs are more
    interesting and challenging, and less tedious and
    repetitive.

13
Deskilling or Upskilling?
  • In a debate-stopping article, 1987, Attewell
    reported that there were about as much deskilling
    in automated jobs as upskilling, but that
    upskilling had the upper hand. Computing, then,
    seems to make work a little more interesting.

14
Quality of Work Life
  • Measures of Work Life
  • Physically dangerous or not
  • Work pace
  • Clean air and workplace
  • Illumination
  • Dirty looks of managers
  • Performance monitoring
  • The other side of the coin
  • Employment rate and salary

15
Surveillance
  • Many companies routinely monitor how professional
    workers use their e-mail and the Internet while
    at work.
  • White collar workers feel the threat of
    surveillance, including managers, professionals,
    and specialists, in addition to clerical workers.

16
Ubiquity of Computing
  • Devices causing ubiquity of computing include
  • Laptop computer
  • Cell phone
  • Personal digital assistants
  • Those devices make it possible for people to work
    wherever they are at whatever time.

17
Concern of Ubiquity of Computing
  • The concern of ubiquity of computing
  • It blurs the line between work and home,
  • It creates additional stress in white collar
    jobs,
  • It increases the pace of work as well.
  • It deteriorates the quality of work life.

18
Organizational Structure
  • Computers and Internet would make organizations
    centralized or decentralized.
  • Is computing tech altering organizations or
    organizations are altering computing tech?

19
Technological Elite
  • Tech Elite refers to the few talented people who
    design and build computer system of an
    organization.
  • It was feared that these tech elite would take on
    a special privileged role in the organization and
    would have undue influence in the organizations
    affairs.

20
Privacy
  • Privacy was, is, and will be a central issue in
    the relationship between computing and society.
  • Privacy is threatened by computers because
    computers unprecedented capacity of
  • Collecting data,
  • Processing data,
  • Disseminating data.

21
Surveillance and Privacy
  • It is legal in US for the company to monitor the
    employees use of company-owned equipment and
    network for e-mail and Internet surfing and
    access.
  • How about company owned laptops and cell phones
    being used at home?

22
Computer Trailing
  • When a person goes online, automatically he
    leaves behind a trail showing where he has gone
    and how long he stays.
  • The trail can be used for characterize a person
    for business, political, or whatever use.

23
Computer Trailing vs. Privacy
  • Do you think computer trailing is against Privacy
    Act?
  • Is it against law if someone uses your trails
    left at public places such as a shop, a
    bookstore, and street?
  • Is Internet a public or a private occasion?

24
Security
  • The security issue refers to the threat that your
    computer system is attacked online.
  • Can breaking into your computer be compared
    legally to breaking into your house?
  • When you have a high-speed direct connection to
    Internet, you expose your system to the Internet
    hackers and computer viruses.

25
Hacking Tools Available at Internet
  • Internet becomes an exchange market for hacking
    tools.
  • Internet provides a meeting place for hackers and
    crackers to exchange information.
  • This is an issue related to online freedom of
    speech.

26
Degradation of Social Life
  • How computer and Internet may change our social
    life?
  • More time online, less time physically with
    family and friends, less time playing sports,
    less conversations.
  • People are getting into deeper into the virtual
    world, and less capable to function in the real
    world.

27
An Example of ipod
  • Article Tune into Your World, Tune out All
    Others
  • By Linda Shrieves, ltThe Orlando Sentinelgt
  • See ltThe Press of Atlantic Citygt, 1/24/2006, p.B1

28
Why Do People Love iPod?
  • It tunes out the noises we prefer to close off.
  • Its healthy to decompress yourself when you
    live in a chaotic, densely populated world.
  • It helps people relieve stress or, particularly
    at work, concentrate.

29
Does iPod Tune Out Too Much?
  • Its a brushoff or snub, though maybe not
    intended. Technological insulation.
  • Your day can be filled up with these short
    contacts with people (greetings or short talks)
    you see regularly. People who dont have that
    are really missing something.
  • Its not helping us with social skills.

30
Digital Divides
  • Digital divide refers to differences in the
    availability of computing, especially in terms of
    Internet access, between two different groups in
    a society
  • Examples of digital divides addressed so far
  • Between young and old
  • Between races
  • Between poor and rich
  • Between developed countries and developing
    countries.

31
Freedom of Speech Online
  • Are the following expressions online protected by
    the freedom of speech
  • Whipping up racism, hatred, violence, terrorism,
    fascism,
  • Is a private web site private or public?

32
Computer and Society
  • Present and Future
  • (see Part 2)
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