
Just to add to the discussion: there is a great article about Ethics and software development
The primary definition in the Merriam-Webster online dictionary says,
"The discipline dealing with what is good and bad and with moral duty and obligation."
One of the secondary definitions says, "The principles of conduct governing an individual or a group."
I realize that there are different views of morality and we could go down a very slippery slope discussing them. So, decide upon what you consider "moral duty and obligation" before reading further.
In practical terms, those who work in IT will likely be responsible for implementing or planning technical components that partly shape their organization's ethical dimension
The article goes on discussing a few ethical dimensions:
- Privacy
- Encryption
- Trust
- Freedom of speech
- Intellectual property
The phrase "do no harm" does not appear in the Hippocratic Oath, although most people think it does. While it does not appear in the ethical codes under examination, the essence of the phrase comes through. The ACM code says "avoid harm to others." It elaborates the statement to say that harm "means injury or negative consequences, such as undesirable loss of information, loss of property, property damage, or unwanted environmental impacts." The IEEE code has a broader statement: "to accept responsibility in making decisions consistent with the safety, health and welfare of the public, and to disclose promptly factors that might endanger the public or the environment."
The concept of causing no harm to others is quite a general concept, and one that we find in most professional codes of conduct. The devil, however, is in the details and many grey areas exist. We have already touched on the issue of harm in our discussion of trust. Just as medical professionals have to align their moral compass with the needs of society, software developers must decide what is morally right to them. They must decide upon a definition of harm that reconciles with their concept of morality.
My opinion ?
I am always struck by the "military" example often taken by developer when considering ethical behavior to respect. It supposes you can weight your ethics before applying for a job involving a suspicious activity.
But is it always possible ?
For me, Trust is really what matters most. Will the trust put in your program by your client be well placed ?
Supposed you are developing a system for computing the return rate of house mortgages, and you have initialized your system with 20 years of data... Dealer brokers, banks, Wall Streets institutions will trust your system and demand ever more deals!... with the result will all know.
Was it unethical from your part to build such a system ? Or a system pricing Credit Default Swap ?
I have no easy answer. Those financial systems had some good arguments for them in the beginning and the trust put in them was fonded, your ethics were respected (you were helping people accessing to home property through the financial management done by your software!)... and then the conditions changed (with those NINA loans - No Income No Assets! -... meaning your 20 years of data are now worthless), and everything went downhill from there.
Did you compromise, did you renounce to your integrity back then when you took that job in finance ?
And in regards with recent events, should you turn down every future job proposition in finance ?
Because this time, we are not talking about something as "ominous" as WMD. And yet, the current financial and economic crisis has some clear roots in unethical behavior!
More specifically, the root is in the exclusion of the people from the system: loans were given not because the system trusted the people and their ability to meet their charges, but because it trusted the market, and its ability to provide the money by selling enough homes if there were a credit default.
And that could have worked too, except that it takes people (judge, police, ...) to foreclose the home of other people, and those people in charge of validating/enforcing the massive number of foreclosure need to keep the system afloat, they all say: "wait a minute... something is very wrong here". The system could not get enough foreclosure to get enough money to face massive credit defaults... and basically shutdown on itself.
Again, what was your role, your implication in designing/implementing the financial information systems used to monitor those credits ? Were you convinced, based on the 20-years data, that it would have worked ? Did you closed your eyes on the loan condition changes that made your all data obsolete (and lead to the current crisis) ?
Tough questions.
People and Trust need to be at the center of any ethic behavior definition. And in our line of business (developer), it is easy to "abstract people away" and only consider the "system" (the program we develop), hence shifting unknowingly to some serious unethical behavior...
Note: I do not address here other more classic topics regarding ethics and coding, like intellectual property, but basically "people" and "trust" are still two very important variables in those other "ethical" issues.
But my point is: even if you do respect the ethic code of your company, respect its privacy and intellectual property code, that does not prevent some unethical actions to take place.