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Shapes of Human Interplay in the Digital Age

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Title: Shapes of Human Interplay in the Digital Age


1
Shapes of Human Interplayin the Digital Age
  • Rafael Capurro
  • International Center for Information Ethics
    (ICIE)
  • Tehran University, 29th of September 2014

2
Introduction
  • The following presentation is based on the text
    of a keynote at the International Symposium on
    Philosophy of Library and Information Science
    Ethics Theory and Practice, Kastamonu, Turkey,
    September 3, 2014.
  • The full text is available at http//www.capurro.
    de/kastamonu.html

3
Introduction
  • UNESCO report Renewing the Knowledge Societies
    Vision for Peace and Sustainable Development
    (Mansell and Trembley, 2013

4
Introduction
  • The conceptual difference between information
    understood as signals measured in bits and their
    interpretation upon which knowledge is built, has
    social and political consequences.

5
Introduction
  • A knowledge society cannot be reduced to the
    creation of a technological infrastructure but
    implies learning processes ingrained in specific
    cultural contexts aiming at creating inclusive
    societies based on equality of opportunity as
    well as on a balance between a commercial and
    community oriented perspectives.

6
Introduction
  • Tragedy of the commons (James Garret Hardin,
    1915-2003) excessive and negative use of a
    common good (communty model)
  • Tragedy of the anti-commons (Michael Heller)
    blocking creativity via intellectual property
    measures (commercial model)

7
Introduction
  • knowledge and information societies The plural
    form is a mark of human freedom.

8
On Ethics and Information Ethics
  • Ethics as a philosophical discipline achieves a
    culmination in the Western tradition after a
    complex evolution in the so-called Presocratics
    as well as in Plato, the Sophists, and the Stoa
    to mention just a few schools of thought in
    Aristotles practical philosophy (philosophia
    praktiké)

9
On Ethics and Information Ethics
  • that includes
  • ethics (ethiké) as a reflection on the moulding
    or in-forming the individual character (ethos)
  • economics (oikonomiké), i.e. everything related
    with the rules of good life (eu zen) within the
    family (oikos),
  • and politics (politiké) as a reflexion about the
    rules of the city-state (polis).

10
On Ethics and Information Ethics
  • The difference between ethics or practical
    philosophy and morality or social customs and
    values is crucial because it allows us to
    problematize a given implicit or explicit
    morality that includes, as Michel Foucault
    remarked, all possible forms of self-conception
    as a subject in a society.

11
On Ethics and Information Ethics
  • Information ethics deals with norms and values
    at stake in information and knowledge societies
    dealing, for instance, with ethical issues of
  • the Internet (cyberethics information ethics in
    a narrower sense),
  • computer science (computer ethics),
  • biological and medical sciences (bioinformation
    ethics),
  • mass media (media ethics)
  • library and information science field (library
    ethics)
  • business field (business information ethics) 

12
On Ethics and Information Ethics
  • IE as a descriptive and emancipatory theory
  • Information ethics understood as a
    problematization of norms and values on which
    communicational processes are based has a long
    tradition whose origins go back, in the Western
    tradition, to, for instance, the Platonic
    criticism of writing with regard to oral speech
    (logos).
  • They culminate in the past century with the
    critical discourse about the Gutenberg Galaxy
    (McLuhan) and the cyberspace by authors such as
    Marshall McLuhan, Walter Ong and Vilém Flusser. I

13
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • Information and communication professionals have
    dealt for centuries with the task of social
    regulation not only as they created systems and
    instruments for the classification, storage and
    retrieval of knowledge based on different media.

14
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • Our actions in the cyberworld are subject to
    digital codes that influence also our life in the
    physical world in such a way that who has only a
    limited access to the cyberworld experiences such
    limits negatively in her daily life. 

15
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • The cyberworld hybridizes with cultures and
    different individual and social ways of living.
    We are at the beginning of an interdisciplinary
    and intercultural reflection dealing with digital
    information and communication from the
    perspectives of practical philosophy, political
    science, sociology, jurisprudence and cultural
    anthropology.

16
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • This interdisciplinary discourse should learn how
    to evaluate the gains and losses of different
    social interplays in information and knowledge
    societies,

17
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • particularly analyzing who is excluded from what
    benefits and what are the negatives and positives
    ways, with a lot of possibilities in-between, of
    appropriation of such possibilities or, what is
    more common, of becoming appropriated by them.

18
II. Ethical Issues of Information and Knowledge
Societies in the Digital Age
  • What is a smart phone?
  • At a personal level it gives a lot of freedom of
    communication and exchange of information.
  • Within the context of the cyberworld and together
    with other digital devices it is a tool for
    physical and digital control and surveillance

19
III. The Ethical Challenge of Global Surveillance
  • Different societal groups have reacted with open
    letters and declarations that are worth being
    documented.

20
III. The Ethical Challenge of Global Surveillance
  • 2013 AOL, Apple, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn,
    Microsoft, Twitter and Yahoo
  • 2013 Privacy International, Access, and the
    Electronic Frontier Foundation and co-signed by
    over three hundred and sixty organizations from
    more than seventy countries
  • 2013 Access, Amnesty International, Electronic
    Frontier Foundation, Human Rights Watch, Privacy
    International.

21
III. The Ethical Challenge of Global Surveillance
  • On December 10, 2013, at the International Human
    Rights Day, 562 authors, including 5 Nobel Prize
    laureates (Orhan Pamuk, J.M. Coetzee, Elfride
    Jelinek, Günter Grass, Thomas Tranströmer), from
    over 80 countries launched the following appeal
    in defense of civil liberties.

22
III. The Ethical Challenge of Global Surveillance
  • January 2014 a great number of academics from
    all over the world have signed a declaration
    Academics Against Mass Surveillance following
    the initiative by Nico van Eijk, Beate Roessler,
    Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius and Manon Oostveen
    from the University of Amsterdam.

23
Conclusion
  • These letters and declarations are a clear
    testimony that when dealing with the issue of
    privacy we are dealing with the future of freedom
    in the digital age.

24
Conclusion
  • Information ethics should make critically
    explicit new realities and possibilities of human
    interplay generated by new tools in the physical
    as well as in the digital world.

25
Conclusion
  • The cyberworld creates new forms of authenticity
    as well as of deformation and even annihilation
    of the human interplay with a lot of
    possibilities in between.

26
Conclusion
  • It is about empowering citizens to manage better
    their lives as well as about creating structures
    of local and global social cooperation and
    support

27
Conclusion
  • without using such structures as instruments of
    control and surveillance that transform
    individuals and societies into puppets of state
    power or of big commercial enterprises that
    follow paradoxically the paths of 20th century
    mass media transforming the early dreams of the
    internet into a nightmare.

28
Conclusion
  • Information and communication commercial and
    state monopolists exert a sometimes hidden
    sometimes explicit control on individuals by
    bypassing not only their privacy, i.e., their own
    decision about concealing and revealing who they
    are, but also legal and political agreements at
    national and international level.

29
Conclusion
  • By doing so they undermine the foundation upon
    which they are built, namely trust among free
    players sharing a common world.  

30
Conclusion
  • The Declaration of Principles proclaimed in
    December 2003 at the World Summit on the
    Information Society was a good but weak start
    compared with todays urgency of an International
    Charta of Digital Rights establishing global
    rules of fair play for shapes of human interplay
    in the digital age.

31
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