{"title":"‘Doing’ technology ethics","authors":"Andrew P. Rebera","doi":"10.55613/jeet.v33i1.126","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Ten years ago, pundits claimed that 3-D printing would change the world (D’Aveni, 2013). That this is, to put it kindly, not true yet, goes to show that claims about the impact of new technologies are always highly speculative. Today, large language models (or tools based on them) are the latest technology to promise or threaten disruption in almost every walk of life, from work to education to art. But it remains to be seen how broad, deep, and lasting the impact will be. If uncertainty surrounds even the short-term impact of technologies that, though new, are at large in society, how much more difficult is it to anticipate the ways in which technologies not yet at large might fit into, reshape, or upturn our lives? There is no shortage of work on such issues. Yet Marc Steen’s Ethics for people who work in tech, published this year by CRC Press, is a welcome addition. Steen aims to empower tech professionals—an ill-defined but arguably underserved group—to manage, and take responsibility for, the impact of the technologies they develop.","PeriodicalId":157018,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies","volume":"9 7","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.55613/jeet.v33i1.126","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ten years ago, pundits claimed that 3-D printing would change the world (D’Aveni, 2013). That this is, to put it kindly, not true yet, goes to show that claims about the impact of new technologies are always highly speculative. Today, large language models (or tools based on them) are the latest technology to promise or threaten disruption in almost every walk of life, from work to education to art. But it remains to be seen how broad, deep, and lasting the impact will be. If uncertainty surrounds even the short-term impact of technologies that, though new, are at large in society, how much more difficult is it to anticipate the ways in which technologies not yet at large might fit into, reshape, or upturn our lives? There is no shortage of work on such issues. Yet Marc Steen’s Ethics for people who work in tech, published this year by CRC Press, is a welcome addition. Steen aims to empower tech professionals—an ill-defined but arguably underserved group—to manage, and take responsibility for, the impact of the technologies they develop.
十年前,权威人士声称3d打印将改变世界(D 'Aveni, 2013)。委婉地说,这还不是真的,这表明关于新技术影响的说法总是高度投机的。今天,大型语言模型(或基于它们的工具)是最新的技术,几乎在生活的每一个领域,从工作到教育到艺术,都有可能被颠覆。但影响的广度、深度和持久性仍有待观察。如果不确定性甚至围绕着技术的短期影响,这些技术虽然是新的,但在社会中广泛存在,那么预测尚未普及的技术可能融入、重塑或改善我们的生活的方式会有多困难呢?在这些问题上不缺乏工作。然而,马克·斯蒂恩(Marc Steen)今年由CRC Press出版的《科技工作者的道德规范》(Ethics for the people in tech)是一个受欢迎的补充。Steen的目标是让技术专业人员——一个定义不清但服务不足的群体——能够管理他们所开发的技术的影响,并对其承担责任。