CSC 379: Ethics in Computing  
  Summer II 2006  
 
 
 
 
   
   
   
   
  COURSE OVERVIEW  
  This course is is a survey of the ethical issues involved in computing. It discusses the way that computers and software pose new ethical questions or pose new versions of standard moral problems and dilemmas. It stresses case studies that relate to ethical theory.  
     
  INSTRUCTOR  
  Edward F. Gehringer
Office: 2301 Partners I
(919) 515-2066
Office hours:
MW 2:45-3:45
efg@ncsu.edu
 
     
  TEACHING ASSISTANT  
  Ahmed Bakir
abakir@ncsu.edu
919-641-6642
 
     
     
  Lecture  
 

A basic ethical principle is not to steal -- that is, to take something that belongs to someone else without the owner's consent. The rule against stealing is so basic that it is usually stated without explaining why. But if we were to try to justify it, we might say something like, "Stealing someone else's property deprives the other person of something that is rightfully his." >>

 
     
  Reading  
  Related readings (not mandatory) can be found on the Intellectual-property law pages on the Ethics in Computing Web site..  
     
  Quiz  
  Take the quiz using WebAssign  
     
 
Discussion
 
  Should software be patentable? (Only Group B has an online discussion for this lesson.)  
   
     
     
  The deadline for taking the quiz and participating in the discussion is Monday, July 10 at 11 PM.