Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/26376
Title: More than just friends? Facebook, disclosive ethics and the morality of technology
Authors: Light, B
McGrath, K
Griffiths, M
Keywords: social networking;ethics;design;consequences;Latour
Issue Date: 14-Dec-2008
Publisher: ICIS
Citation: Light, B., McGrath, K. and Griffiths, M. (2008) 'More than just friends? Facebook, disclosive ethics and the morality of technology', ICIS 2008 Proceedings. Paris, France, 14-17 December, 193, pp. 1 - 16.. Available at: https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2008/193.
Abstract: Social networking sites have become increasingly popular destinations for people wishing to chat, play games, make new friends or simply stay in touch. Furthermore, many organizations have been quick to grasp the potential they offer for marketing, recruitment and economic activities. Nevertheless, counterclaims depict such spaces as arenas where deception, social grooming and the posting of defamatory content flourish. Much research in this area has focused on the ends to which people deploy the technology, and the consequences arising, with a view to making policy recommendations and ethical interventions. In this paper, we argue that tracing where morality lies is more complex than these efforts suggest. Using the case of a popular social networking site, and concepts about the morality of technology, we disclose the ethics of Facebook as diffuse and multiple. In our conclusions we provide some reflections on the possibilities for action in light of this disclosure.
Description: Paper presented at the 29th International Conference on Information Systems, Paris, France, 14-17 December, 2008.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/26376
Appears in Collections:Dept of Computer Science Research Papers

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