How do designers go about advocating for their values? Have specific resources and steps to take +3
Include examples of HCI and design leading to unethical outcomes. Have examples of issues caused by ethics not being considered when designing +1
How to navigate moral dilemmas?
In the intro, have a quick primer of ethical theory
Is it really true that you have to pick diversity in culture and ability or learnability? Student gives example of stairs making it into buildings across cultures and countries
Is it possible to design “too ethically” and lead to more problems?
Student disagrees that social media only amplifies division; gives example that a politically neutral person could have become swayed by social media
Discuss the ethics of consuming technology, and how psychology plays a role in this
Mention how tech innovation inevitably increases the digital divide–and increases the wealth gap and inequality and leaves some behind/excluded
Expand more on professional martyrdom. Where to draw the line for a company’s ethical/unethical actions?
Should the public/community be more educated about design and ethics? What is the public’s role in creating feedback for ethical design?
Why do we, as designers and researchers, cater to the majority? Why not adjust the research method? What alternatives are there?
Have illustrations showing the impact for each section (for example, a picture of tech waste in a landfill)
How much say do you have in a company’s values at a big tech company? Have examples of individuals successfully advocating for ethics at a tech company and resources pointing to other cases +1
Intro of the chapter mentions it’s about interfaces, not interactions. What does that mean and why is it significant? What’s the difference between the two?
What can designers do to reduce the energy needs of the internet?
Include examples of case studies/interviews of people currently making some of these ethical choices
If tech is an amplifier, anything man made will have pain and negativity since these are part of human nature, right?
Talk about other stakeholders in building interfaces and the parts they play in design ethics, for instance, researchers and project managers
Student found ending frustrating–nowhere to turn to or look to for direction, just left to decide for themselves. Who (designers, companies) can they look up to?
How to navigate the tension between trying to design for everyone and not leave everyone out vs this being an unrealistic approach?
Student believes people using tech interfaces in bad faith should not be blamed on the tech or the designer, who designed it in good faith. Maybe should address this
How to tell if someone’s actually using inclusive design, universal design, participatory design, value-sensitive design, and design justice, vs just using the narrative? How do you evaluate design ethics?
All talk about ethics without action isn’t impactful. How to incorporate ethical practice in an impactful way?
How will standardization be affected when AI/ML start doing more design?
What should the industry do? Should they hire a designated ethics person?
Right to Repair laws (why didn’t Google’s Project Ara take off?)
Mike Monteiro's book Ruined by Design
Terminology:
Re-define the types of design in the intro since it’s been a while since we saw them +1
Student questions:
How has the discipline of philosophy impacted how we think of ethics in HCI?
Do academics who study ethics in HCI typically back training in ethics? if so, what does that look like?
How are ethics principles currently being integrated into industry, beyond pledges from some tech companies to "do better"?
Grammar & typos:
"In this sense, innovations in interface software and technology is responsible for creating the demand, and therefore responsible for the pollution and waste".