Abstract

Individuals and organizations have adopted computers so quickly and in such large numbers that they have paid insufficient attention to the moral implications of such rapid change. As more and more personal data are kept on computers and disks, increasing numbers of people have authorized, as well as easy unauthorized access. Rules that ought to govern the handling of these data are often left unspecified. Furthermore, different organizations differ in their rules, because no consensus has yet been reached on issues of privacy and security. The need for clear moral thinking and moral argument is therefore especially important in this area.

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