Digital Themes

Data Ethics

Data ethics is the study and practice of gathering, processing, sharing and using digital information with regard to morality and social values. In today’s digital age, there are abundant amounts of data available for organizations to use and maneuver to achieve their goals, which can easily become hazardous for customers and users. Data ethics guide data scientists, providing a framework for handling data responsibly. A data framework outlines the ethical use of data, algorithms (artificial intelligence, machine learning), coding and programming hacking—placing limitations on the way organizations can use information derived from technology.

Data ethics ensures that users consent to shared data and organizations adhere to compliances and privacy laws. Organizations are also held to task on using insights derived from data responsibly and legally with regard to social and economic justice—mitigating biases against certain groups and data sets. Data must also be used for the purpose it was gathered for and consented to.

Data ethics also gets involved in the data supply chain, ensuring responsible practices at every step—from aggregation to storage. This mitigates mishaps and potential data privacy risks before data is shared between trusted parties.

Handling data in an ethical way:

  • Builds universal framework. Data ethics defines what organizations can and cannot do with information gathered using technology. Framework works as a guide for organizations to instill moral values and maintain a responsible code of conduct when incorporating big data.

  • Protects data privacy. Data privacy laws are an evolving process and information ethics can be used to navigate regulation regarding customer data and consent.

  • Negates bias. Information derived from data can used to form sexist and racist biases. Both human analysis and artificial intelligence can be biased and data ethics works to protect against prejudice.

  • Gains customer trust. An organization will be considered reliable in the market if they are known to operate according to a code of conduct and practice data ethics.

  • Holds organizations accountable. Customers and users can rest assured that organizations are tasked with following ethical practices.
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