I really love this and I would love to see this guide built into all hackathons / hacks4good, the development of apps4good, etc.:
Ethical OS Toolkit: a guide to anticipating the future of impact of today’s technology
Or: how to not regret the things you will build
I have only one disappointment with the guide, but I’ll save that for the end of the blog.
This is from the guide, and explains why this document is needed:
As technologists, it’s only natural that we spend most of our time focusing on how our tech will change the world for the better. Which is great. Everyone loves a sunny disposition. But perhaps it’s more useful, in some ways, to consider the glass half empty. What if, in addition to fantasizing about how our tech will save the world, we spent some time dreading all the ways it might, possibly, perhaps, just maybe, screw everything up? No one can predict exactly what tomorrow will bring (though somewhere in the tech world, someone is no doubt working on it). So until we get that crystal ball app, the best we can hope to do is anticipate the long-term social impact and unexpected uses of the tech we create today.
The last thing you want is to get blindsided by a future YOU helped create. The Ethical OS is here to help you see more clearly.
The guide includes:
- A checklist of 8 risk zones to help you identify the emerging areas of risk and social harm most critical for your team to start considering now.
- 14 scenarios to spark conversation and stretch your imagination about the long-term impacts of tech you’re building today.
- 7 future-proofing strategies to help you take ethical action today.
The risk zones that the guide identifies are:
- Truth, Disinformation, and Propaganda
- Addiction & the Dopamine Economy
- Economic & Asset Inequalities
- Machine Ethics & Algorithmic Biases
- Surveillance State
- Data Control & Monetization
- Implicit Trust & User Understanding
- Hateful & Criminal Actors
The Ethical OS is a joint creation of the Institute for the Future and Omidyar Network’s Tech and Society Solutions Lab.
The guide has lots of discussion questions that developers can explore. It’s not so much that the questions have right or wrong answers – they are meant to spur consideration of how a new technology meant to help people could be misused, something that all too many developers DON’T think about.
The guide also has suggested questions for board members and trustees to ask themselves about tech development, so they can understand the possible risks to their organizations as a result of use of the app.
My only disappointment with the guide – and it’s a BIG disappointment – is that the section on Economic & Asset Inequalities never mentions accessibility for people with disabilities. When tech tools are not accessible for people who have sight impairments, people who have hearing impairments, people with mobility issues, etc., those tools create economic and asset inequalities. It’s really inexcusable that this wasn’t mentioned even once.
Some other blog posts regarding tech4good and work ethics:
- Where are the evaluations of hacksforgood/appsforgood?
- Innovation without replication is a waste of time.
- The Tech Volunteering Group Urgently Needed Everywhere
- Why Do So Few Women Edit Wikipedia? Insights into virtual volunteering
- How to be active & anonymous online – a guide for women in religiously-conservative countries
- Virtue & reputation in the developing world
- Tech & communications jargon versus reality
- You have an obligation to be truthful online
- schedule social media posts? use with caution
- online communities, sexual harassment & hate speech – UNESCO weighs in
- Creating a Speak-up Culture in the Workplace
- Safety in virtual volunteering