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i'm just wondering if you guys have ever had a situation where you were offered a web development project which you turned down because you felt it was unethical or morally questionable.

i've only had this once. i was offered a contract to develop a website for a meat abattoir (i.e. slaughterhouse). what's the problem you may ask? i'm vegetarian. i know, it's not an egregious dilemma, but it just didn't seem right to me.

i have a female graphic designer friend who declined to work on a sex toys website where she was working at the time. funny thing is, it wouldn't bother me to work on a porn site (as long as it wasn't anything shifty - e.g. dwarfs + donkeys, that sort of thing).

anyone else ever had a similar experience?

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Do you expect any "no" answers? Would you believe anyone who said "yea, I cracked XXX for cash"? :) – MichaelGG Mar 23 at 23:41
Shouldn't this be a community wiki? – Greg Mar 23 at 23:59
This is a community wiki, please make it so – Pablo Fernandez Mar 24 at 0:51
I'd be very curious to see this question asked again a year or so into the global recession and compare answers. – jhs Mar 24 at 4:12
@jhs - I will only refer you to my answer... – Yuval A Mar 24 at 11:29
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17 Answers

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I interviewed with someone (an Asian Pacific business man) who offered a LOT OF MONEY to help him build a web site trafficking humans. I kid not. I declined, and never went to that part of town again!

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If it isn't rude to ask, what order of magnitude was the money on? Twice what you normally make? Less? More? – Stuart B Mar 23 at 22:58
Aw man, you should taken the job and money, then got the police involved. Double win. – MichaelGG Mar 23 at 23:39
HAHA - that is awesome! now that is seriously morally questionable. – louism Mar 24 at 1:43
Well, fifteen thousand dollars to start. To me, that's a lot. – Ash Machine Mar 24 at 16:25
even though there is no real correct answer for this threat, this has to be the most bazaar project mentioned. – louism Apr 9 at 9:51
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Theres a difference between "morally questionable" work and "does not agree with my principles" work.

For example, I would not turn down a porn website (something that many people I know find objectionable) but I would turn down a religious website or an adware website since I do not agree with those things.

Even that depends on what you define as your morals and what you define as your principles.

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good point. theres morality, ethics, then principles <- agreed, all different things. i guess there is also personal taste? – louism Mar 24 at 1:29
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I have turned down opportunities to work where I felt morally questionable about the job on which I'd be working.

At the end of the day, you live with yourself, and no amount of money or perks is worth feeling guilty or bad about you as a person.


I've even taken it beyond that -

I used to work at a large company where the company goal didn't really fit into my personal philosophy. I wasn't asked to write anything objectionable, and I actually even felt that most tasks I worked on where interesting and challenging.

However, after a couple of years, I started to realize that I was feeling fairly unfulfilled - the goals of the company didn't fit with my personal philosophy. Doing better in my job, in my mind, didn't make me feel like I was doing something valuable for the world at large, and I realized that was important to me. I don't pretend that it is important for the world at large, or any of my peers, but it was personally important to me. I ended up changing jobs, where I moved into a position with a lower pay, but a much more personally satisfying role.

I now realize this was a very smart move for me. Working in a position where I was happier actually made me work harder, and as a result, I managed to improve my career at a pace that I believe is much faster than it would have been without the move. The small step backwards put me on a much better long term path - mostly because it put me into a position where I was excited and motivated to strive forward.

I feel that it's difficult, sometimes, to turn away the money - but in the long run, for me personally, whenever I've been presented an opportunity where I've asked the question of myself, I realize I'm much better off moving onto the next thing.

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Really interesting - I'm in a similar position as you were but am reluctant to make the move for less money. Your outcome is food for thought... – danio Mar 23 at 23:10
+1 and more if I could. I once worked for a company that was the personal loans arm of a major bank and although all the systems I worked on were legal some of the what I considered inhumane hounding of debtors (terminal cancer was no excuse) was unsettling. They paid well but I left after a year. – Cruachan Mar 23 at 23:15
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This is a valid question, however, a tad too opinionated and subjective. For one, you refuse to create a website that sells animal flesh, but you are completely indifferent with regard to making one that sells human flesh.

Scary.

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lol +1 for pointing out the irony! – Atomiton Mar 23 at 23:06
Pfft, just wordplay. Porn sites sell human flesh only in the same way that job sites do. – Blorgbeard Mar 23 at 23:33
Was trying to make the point that the line between personal opinion and morality and ethics is, at its clearest, very blurry. Some people like porn so they think it's okay, some people like pork, others like jobs. People do whatever they're okay with. – karim79 Mar 23 at 23:49
easy: with animals, something dies. with people, if they want to sell their body for sex, well, whos being taken advantage of? i wouldnt be involved in any porn site where people are being taken advantage of. – louism Mar 24 at 1:17
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i did some quick googling and found one porn 'actress' stating she earns between $500-$800 for a sex scene in a movie (Kimi Lixx). you'll find many women (and men) do it for the money - they arent being taken advantage of. anyone doing porn against their will is outright wrong of course. – louism Mar 30 at 8:53
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"For every epsilon there exists a delta"...

Barring any illegal activity of any kind, we all know that if anybody pays us enough, we'll do any development job we are offered.

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+1 for truth. Barring anything that could get me in serious trouble, (pedo sites, etc...) I would on just about anything if the price is right. Maybe I'm cynical, but I see this as human nature, if not a survival instinct. – Stuart B Mar 23 at 22:56
Speak for yourself. I'd like to think I'm clearheaded enough to so the right thing, and ain't giving up my naive illusions without the payday... – dmckee Mar 23 at 22:57
@ocdecio: Been there. – dmckee Mar 23 at 23:02
Only if money is the most important thing to you. If ethics aren't your thing, there's plenty of grey area when you join the military. – Atomiton Mar 23 at 23:05
agreed, if i was offered $10-15k AUD for that slaughterhouse website, i would have done it (thats enough for me to put my ethics on hold). but this idea of 'enough money and we'd do it' is very theoretical. no one pays more then they have to, and there will be people that do it for less. – louism Mar 24 at 1:37
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The problem with Ethics is that from person to person they seem to be remarkably, shall we say, flexible.

It is absolutely okay, even comendable, to refuse to do something you personally have an ethical issue with (this extends beyond just web work).

Please don't expect others to have the same ethics.

The question of whether there should be an overarching ethics body for devepoment or IT in general is another topic. And the ethics there should be on the actions of the developer rather than the subject matter of the development I would assume.

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true. But I'd like to think of it in terms of "some people's conscience has been seared more than others" There are certain matters, however, which are unconscionable. – Atomiton Mar 23 at 23:07
yeah, some things no one in the right mind would be involved with (e.g. kiddy porn, nazi promotion, racist, etc). then there are the gray areas which are ok for some but not others (e.g. porn, religion, etc) – louism Mar 24 at 1:35
Of course, with 45% of USA thinking the hard left is racists, and the hard left thinking that 45% of the country is racist, it's kind of up in the air how you define some of those universally understood terms you listed :) – DVK Sep 27 at 19:57
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Yes, I've turned down morally questionable jobs.

I can't see myself sleeping at night after designing one of these scam "government grant" or "work from home" sites.

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Web work, no. Games work, yes.

I was instructed to write up a particle effect for a wrestling game that would trigger when one player struck the other. At the end of each particle trail, the blood droplet was to color the canvas red. I didn't stick around the company for very long, and I have always made it a point to leave a company when the work or the situation didn't agree with me in some way.

Let me put it a different way. If the guy at the company's front desk has been ordered to lie to you, who is to blame for the ethics of the action? The company, certainly. But I (and the Nuremburg jury) figure that he is at least as responsible for the action because by providing the means to carry out an unethical action, he made it possible for the unethical decision to be made.

There are ethics that are concrete (Nuremburg) and there are ethics that are less concrete - vegetarians might claim that their ethics are every bit as universal, but there are choices in ethics that people make differently. Our choice of how to behave and what to do at work fits into that category quite often. If you wouldn't personally custom a slaughterhouse, you probably shouldn't serve one professionally... just as you probably shouldn't work in politics if you have a problem with political spin.

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good point. just like 'Darko Z' said above, he wouldnt do a religious website, which to me is a surprise, i would have no problem with it. but to other people, me turning down a slaughterhouse website because im a vego is weird. – louism Mar 24 at 1:42
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While checking out eLance (yeah..I know) a few years ago I saw a lot of sleazy stuff I refused to have any part of. I was never actually offered any of the work, but I refused to bid on any of it.

MSN id harvester, spam emailers, cloning a website, that kind of thing.

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I made a conscious decision a long time ago to stay away from work related to the military-industrial complex. I just wouldn't be able to bring myself to work on systems whose primary aim is to kill people -- no matter what other upsides there might be (protecting one's country, working on "cool" stuff, etc).

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Turned down working on porn sites, I have no problem with porn but would have a hard time explaining to my mom where I was making my money.

Turned down work for some options traders - the ones I have met we're scum bags ripping people off - karma is a bitch and I try not to generate bad karma if I can help it. BTW one guy ended up getting his legs broken by a client he ripped off - glad I was no where near that one!

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I can think of lots of work I would turn down on ethical grounds:

  • Writing viruses or adware.
  • Writing deceptive sites that extract money from people under misleading premises.
  • Websites engaging in illegal activities.
  • Porn. (My personal objections here.)

My personal feeling is that if a company is being deceptive or dishonest with its customers, I want no part of working for them. How could you trust an employer / client that deceives its customers?

Edit to move beyond the hypothetical: I was once approached to sell my company to some stock brokers who wanted it as a shell corporation that they could take public. They weren't particularly interested in the company or its products. They just wanted an established company. The deal stunk and I quickly declined.

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I've never been offered anything unethical. But, as an iPhone developer, I've of course seen the success of the likes of iFart and been tempted to try my hand at that kind of product. I ultimately decided that I wouldn't feel right charging any amount of money for something of that sort and I'm still plugging away at products that, while less successful, are ones I don't have to grin sheepishly while showing to people.

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I have no qualms about "morally questionable", but I do not do work that crosses my non-moral principles. That is, I have rejected potential work for domain squatters and a debt collection company. I would not accept any work, web-related or not, from sources such as those.

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Debt collection is immoral? – ceejayoz Mar 23 at 22:43
It depends on the company but many of them use pretty nasty methods. Then again some of the people who owe the money aren't exactly paragons of virtue... – danio Mar 23 at 22:45
interesting. now we are really hitting on gray areas since debt collection is a legitimate business. and domain squatters are more annoying then immortal/unethical. – louism Mar 24 at 1:46
Correct. I consider "morals" to be far closer to universal than "principles", the latter encompassing the sorts of jobs I will not do. – Sparr Mar 25 at 0:03
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I've had a couple of experiences

1) A certain owner of a large store in Knightsbridge refused to let men wear ear rings, that rankled on a number of levels, not least the pettyness - didn't take the job.

2) A contract to work on a 'Custody Suite' application, that's a prison to you and me, didn't take the job, but later I did work for the Police, and one of the applications was Custody - that felt OK somehow - hmm how the mind is a fickle thing.

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From a purely pragmatic point of view, I suspect that I would not be able to do my best work if I had a strong philosophical disagreement with the goals of my client. If I were to take on such work, I'm pretty sure both the client and I would be unhappy with the results. So it's better for all parties for me to decline such cases.

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isn't the question more have you ever done anything that you found morally objectionable and what was the incentive/reason you broke with your moral?

i'd imagine most people that do things that you find morally objectionable don't find that activity morally objectionable themselves (or have an explenation/reason/delusion that makes it "ok" in their mind).

so in some ways it is actually easy to turn down things you find morally objectionable, it might be interesting to see if anyone has broken with their morals and what the reason and results were.

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