Cyber Ethics
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Perhaps one of the most creative treatments on the subject is the list of cyber commandments (that is, “Thou shall not” acts) available from the Computer Ethics Institute. They include some of these “Thou shall nots”:
       •  Appropriate other people’s intellectual property (IP)
       •  Ignore the social and legal consequences related to the software program one is writing or the computer system one is designing
       •  Illegally copy or use proprietary software that has not been paid for or for which credit has not been given
       •  Interfere with others’ computer or online work
       •  Snoop into or alter others’ computer files or data
       •  Use a computer to bear false witness
       •  Use a computer to cause harm to others
       •  Use others’ computer resources without prior authorization
       •  Use the computer in ways that ignore the consideration of and respect for fellow human beings
See Also: Computer, Cyber Etiquette; Ethic; Harm; Intellectual Property (IP); White Hat Ethic.
Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by Bernadette Schell and Clemens Martin.
Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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MLA Style
"Cyber Ethics." Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary. 2009
- Your Dictionary. 5 July 2009
- <www.yourdictionary.com/hacker/cyber-ethics>
APA Style
Cyber Ethics. (2009). In Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary
- Retrieved July 5th, 2009, from www.yourdictionary.com/hacker/cyber-ethics
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