Tech ethicist is a corporate role that involves examining a company's technologies to ensure that they meet ethical standards, that they do not exploit user vulnerabilities, for example, or infringe upon user rights. The term also refers to independent experts.
Although
there is no standard education stream for tech ethicists yet, to fill that role
an individual would need grounding in not only ethics and technology but also
psychology, law and sociology, among other things. Tech ethicist David Polgar
likes to compare the tasks of engineers and ethicists: Engineers see a problem
and find a solution, after which the ethicist sees the solution and looks for
problems.
Technology
ethics is an increasingly important area of focus as the sophistication and
capacities of technologies have advanced far ahead of concerns for security,
privacy and the well-being of users. The humane tech movement seeks to change
that focus to realign technology with humanity. As that movement develops, the
demand for tech ethicists is likely to grow.
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