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Slow tech: bridging computer ethics and business ethics

Norberto Patrignani (Politecnico of Torino, Torino, Italy)
Diane Whitehouse (The Castlegate Consultancy, Malton, UK)

Information Technology & People

ISSN: 0959-3845

Article publication date: 2 November 2015

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Abstract

Purpose

This discussion paper focuses on a notion of information and communication technology (ICT) that is good, clean and fair that the authors call Slow Tech. The purpose of this paper is to introduce the Slow Tech approach in order to explain how to create a suitable bridge between business ethics and computer ethics.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper’s approach is discursive. It provides a viewpoint. Its arguments are based in an examination of literature relevant to both business ethics and computer ethics. Justification is produced for the use of Slow Tech approach. A number of potential future research and application issues still to be investigated are also provided.

Findings

Slow Tech can be proposed, and used, as a bridging mechanism between companies’ strategies regarding computer ethics and business ethics. Three case studies illustrate the kind of challenges that companies have to tackle when trying to implement Slow Tech in concrete business context. Further study need to be undertaken to make progress on Slow Tech in applied, corporate settings.

Practical implications

ICT companies need to look for innovative, new approaches to producing, selling and recycling their services and products. A Slow Tech approach can provide such insights.

Social implications

Today’s challenges to the production and use of good, clean, and fair ICT, both conceptual and concrete, can act as incentives for action: they can further applied research or encourage social activism. Encouraging the study, and the application, of Slow Tech provides a first step in the potential improvement of a society in which information technology is totally embedded.

Originality/value

The value of this paper in not only for academics and researchers, but also for practitioners: especially for personnel working in ICT companies and for those involved with designing, developing and applying codes of conduct at both European and globally.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper has been produced independently without any external source of funding. The authors wish to acknowledge both the opinions of the original reviewers of this paper when it was developed for presentation at the International Federation for Information Processing ' s Human Choice and Computers 11 (HCC11) conference held in Turku, Finland in July/August 2014, and attendees at the relevant workhsop at which it was presented. They would also like to thank for their insightful commentary: the two anonymous reviewers who criticised the draft paper at the origins of this article, the editors of this special issue of ITP, and Marc Griffith of the Castlegate Consultancy.

Citation

Patrignani, N. and Whitehouse, D. (2015), "Slow tech: bridging computer ethics and business ethics", Information Technology & People, Vol. 28 No. 4, pp. 775-789. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-08-2015-0191

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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