In the midst of the fourth industrial revolution, big data is weighed in
gold, placing enormous power in the hands of data scientists - the
modern AI alchemists. But great power comes with greater responsibility.
This book seeks to shape, in a practical, diverse, and inclusive way,
the ethical compass of those entrusted with big data.
Being practical, this book provides seven real-world case studies
dealing with big data abuse. These cases span a range of topics from the
statistical manipulation of research in the Cornell food lab through the
Facebook user data abuse done by Cambridge Analytica to the abuse of
farm animals by AI in a chapter co-authored by renowned philosophers
Peter Singer and Yip Fai Tse. Diverse and inclusive, given the global
nature of this revolution, this book provides case-by-case commentary on
the cases by scholars representing non-Western ethical approaches
(Buddhist, Jewish, Indigenous, and African) as well as Western
approaches (consequentialism, deontology, and virtue).
We hope this book will be a lighthouse for those debating ethical
dilemmas in this challenging and ever-evolving field.