LOCATION:
Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca en Madrid, Spain
DATE:
06 – 08 November 1996
HOSTED BY:
Facultad de Informatica Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca en Madrid
Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
CONFERENCE CHAIR:
Professor Porfirio Barroso, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain
CONFERENCE DIRECTORS:
Professor Terrell Ward Bynum, Southern Connecticut State University, USA
Professor Luis Joyanes, Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca in Madrid, Spain
Simon Rogerson, De Montfort University, UK
CONFERENCE ADMINISTRATOR:
Maria Angeles Nevado
SPONSORS:
- Ministerio de Educación Cultura
- Facltad de Ciencias de la Inforación
- Universidad Complutense de Madrid
- Universidad San Pablo CEU
- Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid
- Banco Central Hispano
- El Corte Inglés
- Mapfre
- IBM
PAPER ABSTRACT LISITNG:
Keynote Speakers
- “Reason, Relativity and Responsibility in Computer Ethics” – Professor James Moor
- “A European Dimension to Codes of Ethics for the Computer Profession” – Professor Porfirio Barroso
Accepted Abstracts
- “Teleworking: Ethical Issues of Flexible Working” by Chris Moon and Celia Stanworth
- “Freedom of expression and the regulation of Internet access in academia” by Dag Elgesem
- “Living with the Internet: ethics in the Noösphere” by Emma Rooksby and Diarmuid Pigott
- “Is cybermorality possible?” by Jacek Soyka
- “Cyborg identities and the relational web: recasting “narrative identity” in moral and political theory” by Robyn F Brothers
- “Societal values in the information age” by Terrell Ward Bynum
- “Distributing Privacy: Risks, Protection and Policy” by Charles D. Raab and Colin J. Bennett
- “Privacy Practices & Attitudes Across Professions: An International Study” by Ernest A. Kallman and H. Jeff Smith
- “Privacy of electronic medical records: understanding conflicting concerns” by Athanasia Pouloudi and Edgar A. Whitley
- “Intellectual property rights and computer software” by John Weckert
- “Computer crime at CEFORMA: issues and concerns for developing ethical practices” by Gurpreet Dhillon, Leiser Silva and J Backhouse
- “Ethical Issues Arising from Exposure to Computer Viruses Through Computer Usage” by Melius Weideman
- “Privacy and the Computer: Why we need privacy in the information society” by Lucas D. Introna
- “Computing professionals and the “peace dividend”, or one bomb is good as another” by Andy Bissett
- “Searching for the real enemy in information warfare” by Simon Davies
- “Memoria, virtualidad y olvido en la periferia de la informacion” by Martin Becerra
- “Machiavelli, mercenaries and the ethics of outsourcing” by Richard M Kamm
- “Computer Ethics and Moral Methodology” by M Jeroen van den Hoven
- “Moral Judgement of Software Design through Metaphor Analysis” by Johannes Busse
- “Developing information systems that reflect client expectations” by Frank Stowell
- “Addressing health and safety issues in information systems development” by Tom Gough
- “Ethical Problems Related to the use of Computers in Medicine” by Maria Angeles Nevado Llandres
- “Ethical issues in network system design” by Duncan Langford
- “Ethical instruments for the information systems practitioner” by Simon Rogerson
- “Adapting systems development to be ethically sensitive” by Luis Joyanes
- “Technology: The missing factor in understanding the relationship between culture and business ethics” by Peter Davies
- “Management of cultural differences in organisations by intelligent software agents” by Ali Reza Kian Abolfazlian
- “Protecting the public, securing the profession’: practical means of establishing and enforcing ethical standards internationally for professional software engineers” by John Wilkes
- “Conflicts of loyalty – the client versus the stakeholder” by Lesley Rackley, Julian Webb and John Betts
- “Licensing – what happens to the existing professional?” by John Betts, Lesley Rackley and Julian Webb
- “Technology, skills and the gender divisions of labour” by Jacqueline Sewell
- “A profession in development” by Anne Leeming
- “Transforming Responsibility in the Software Market: Service vs. Product” by Carlos Eslava and Jaime Nubiola
- “The mysteries of knowledge work: guild practice and asset management in the firm” by Marc Demarest
- “A review of cyberspace ethics” by Porfirio Barroso
- “Codes of Ethics for Computing at Colleges and Universities in the United States” by Lester J. Pourciau
- “University courses and ethics – using collaborative on-the-job education” by Chris R. Simpson
- “Ensuring that social and ethical issues are addressed within a postgraduate software engineering unit: a case study” by Helen M Edwards and J Barrie Thompson
- “Computer ethics activities for use throughout the computer science curriculum” by Donald Gotterbarn
- “The Need for an Applied Computer Ethics Handbook” by Daniel Salber
- “A Framework for Organizational Ethical Assessment with Specific Directions for IT Management” by Ernest A. Kallman and H. Jeff Smith
- “Ethical analysis of software failure cases” by Harjinder Rahanu, Jennifer Davies and Simon Rogerson