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Gender, ethics and information technology

Adam, AE

Authors

AE Adam



Abstract

Why are most hackers men? Why are most cyberstalkers men and most victims women? Using a novel approach combining feminist ethics, politics and legal theory, Alison Adam illuminates the gendered nature of these and other 'computer ethics' problems. Highlighting the pervasive technological determinism and liberalism in many accounts of social interaction through networked technologies, Alison Adam argues against the 'free market' approach to ethics on the Internet, which takes a shallow view of equality and ignores the politics of gender inequalities. The traditional private / public split of liberalism which keeps women in their place in the private world threatens to spill over onto the Internet where there is already evidence of sanctions against women who are willing to speak up and speak out. Only when we find ways of combining the message of care, emotions and relationships from feminist ethics can we find alternatives to the liberal ethics of the Internet, starkly evident in the 'hacker ethic' - a masculine, libertarian ethic which elevates freedom of speech over the rights of vulnerable members of society.

Citation

Adam, A. (2005). Gender, ethics and information technology. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan

Book Type Authored Book
Publication Date May 12, 2005
Deposit Date Dec 23, 2008
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN 139781403915061
Publisher URL http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230000520