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3 lessons in tech ethics from a tech giant
The more people live with technology, the less they seem to trust it. In the wake of data breaches, questions about surveillance and increasingly consequential decisions being made by art...
Brian Patrick Green is the director of technology ethics at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University and teaches AI ethics in Santa Clara’s Graduate School of Engineering. He is author of the book Space Ethics, co-author of Ethics in the Age of Disruptive Technologies: An Operational Roadmap (The ITEC Handbook), co-author of the Ethics in Technology Practice corporate technology ethics resources, and co-editor of two edited volumes on religion and technology. Green has worked on technology ethics with the World Economic Forum, Partnership on AI, the Vatican, and several major technology companies.
The more people live with technology, the less they seem to trust it. In the wake of data breaches, questions about surveillance and increasingly consequential decisions being made by art...
Over the past two years, the World Economic Forum has been working with a multi-stakeholder group to advance ethics in technology under a project titled Responsible Use of Technology. Thi...
Despite their best intentions, there’s often a gap in businesses between the desire to act ethically and following through on those good intentions.