Semester: | Spring, 2025 | ||
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Course Number: | CISC 4650 L01 | ||
Course Title: | Cyberspace: Issues and Ethics | ||
Instructor: | Dr. Robert K. Moniot | ||
Office LL 821-A, Phone (212) 636-6334 | |||
Office hours: TF 10:00–11:00 AM | |||
Other office hours by appointment. (I am in my office M–F 9–5; call my secretary at (212) 636-6300 or use Google Calendar to make an appointment.) | |||
E-mail: moniot@fordham.edu | |||
URL: http://www.dsm.fordham.edu/~moniot | |||
Class Hours: | TF 8:30 AM – 9:45 AM, Room LL 904 | ||
Required Texts: | Cyberethics: Morality and Law in Cyberspace, 7th ed., by Richard A. Spinello ISBN 978-1-284-18406-8 |
We will devote the first part of the course to examining frameworks within which these issues can be analyzed: the basis of ethical theories, and their application to practical decisions in life. Then we will explore some specific issues such as privacy, intellectual property, and freedom of expression in a series of lectures. The last few weeks of the course are organized around a series of student presentations.
Most of the resources for this class are on the Blackboard web site. For convenience, the syllabus, due dates, and schedule of presentations are also available on the publicly accessible web page:
Readings from the text will be assigned accompanying the lectures. Any outside readings will be provided either by links to available web sources or by posting on Blackboard.
It is not necessary for you to have any specialized training in computer or information science. Most of the issues can be understood without any detailed knowledge of the workings of the underlying technology. In any case, the analysis of these issues from a moral perspective is not dependent on their technological basis.
This course fulfills the core requirement of an EP4 / Values Seminar. It also applies to the following majors and minors: American Studies (Power Politics & Institutions concentration and Art, Music, Theater, or Media requirement), Digital Technologies & Emerging Media (Digital Equity, Ethics, and Power/Values requirement), Humanitarian Studies (Communications, Women's Studies, and Literary Studies requirement), and New Media & Digital Design (Ethics requirement). It is not applicable as a major or minor elective in Computer Science.
You are expected to arrive on time for class. If you do arrive late, please enter the classroom quietly so as not to disrupt the class in session. If you are expecting to receive papers back, wait and ask me at the end of class.
You are expected to remain until the end of class, barring a true emergency. If you know in advance that you will need to leave early, inform me before the start of class, and sit near the door so that you can leave without causing a disruption.
Please turn off all cell phones, beepers, etc. during class. Laptops and tape recorders are not permitted unless as an accommodation approved by the Office of Disability Services.
Grading will be on a percentage scale as follows:
The midterm and final papers are to be based on library research and written in proper scholarly style, with references for all sources consulted. See the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, The Chicago Manual of Style, or similar work for guidelines on proper citation style. I accept citations in any commonly accepted scholarly style. I request a proposal and first draft of each paper, four weeks and two weeks, respectively, before the due date of the paper itself. The proposal can be in outline form or a brief (approx. one page) summary of what you plan to cover. The proposal should indicate some research you have already done. The first draft is expected to be well along, close to final form. At a minimum it must be at least 2/3 of final length, and include some citations to sources consulted. Based on the proposal and draft I provide feedback to improve the final product. The proposal and draft are not graded, but failure to provide them on time will reduce the grade for the paper. Term papers will be accepted late, but with a penalty that increases with time. Papers may be handed in early, but this does not excuse you from providing the proposal and first draft.
In these papers, you are expected to analyze ethical issues raised by the use of ICT in specific areas. You may select the topics of your papers from areas such as the following: intellectual property, software piracy, music and video piracy, on-line privacy, artificial intelligence, defective software, misuse of software, computer crime, viruses and hacking, cryptography and national security, and computer communication and freedom of expression. This list is not intended to be definitive, and you are encouraged to consider other relevant topics of interest, perhaps drawing on your own experiences. The only restriction is that the topic needs to concern ethical and social issues related to ICT.
Academic integrity is very important to the mission of the university. Plagiarism or excessively close collaboration with others on projects will result in an F on the assignment and may result in an F for the course. You are responsible for and expected to follow the Fordham College at Lincoln Center policy regarding matters of academic integrity.
For purposes of this course, generative AI tools will be considered the same as human helpers, i.e., you may use them only in the same way as you would a human helper. Any work you turn in must be your own, or, if collaboration on the assignment is permitted, you must acknowledge any such assistance you received, whether human or AI.
The Undergraduate Faculty Handbook states: “For four-credit courses that meet for 150 minutes [per week], the additional credit is earned by requiring three additional hours of class preparation per week in lieu of an additional hour of formal instruction.” My expectation is that this additional required time outside class will be used to do thorough and careful research work for the two term papers, using the university library's databases to locate quality scholarly articles, reading them carefully, and following up citations in them to discover other sources.
If you are a student with a documented disability and require academic accommodations, please register with the Office of Disability Services for Students (ODS) in order to request academic accommodations for your courses. Please contact the main ODS number at 718-817-0655 to arrange services. Accommodations are not retroactive, so you need to register with ODS prior to receiving your accommodations. Please see me after class or during office hours if you have questions or would like to submit your academic accommodation letter to me if you have previously registered for accommodations.
Read Spinello, ch. 1.
Read McGonigal excerpt (posted on Blackboard).
Read Spinello, ch. 2.
Essay 1 assigned.
Read Johnson, ch. 7 (posted on Blackboard).
Proposal for Midterm Paper due.
Essay 1 due.
Read Spinello, ch. 3.
Essay 2 assigned.
Read Spinello, ch. 4.
First draft of Midterm Paper due.
Essay 2 due.
Essay 3 assigned.
Read Spinello, ch. 5.
Midterm Research Paper due.
Essay 3 due.
Read Spinello, ch. 6.
Essay 4 assigned.
Proposal for Final Paper due.
Essay 4 due.
First draft of Final Paper due.
Course evaluations.
Final Research Paper due.
Study Guides due.