Ethical requirements for reconfigurable sensor technology: A challenge for value sensitive design

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Abstract

Information technology is widely used to fulfill societal goals such as safety and security. These application areas put ever changing demands on the functionality of the technology. Designing technological appliances to be reconfigurable, thereby keeping them open to functionalities yet to be determined, will possibly allow the technology to fulfill these changing demands in an efficient way. In this paper we present a first exploration of potential societal and moral issues of reconfigurable sensors developed for application in the safety and security domain, in the context of a large scale R&D-project in the Netherlands. We discuss the subtle distinction between the relevant notions of reconfigurability, function creep, and unrestricted or unforeseen technological affordances. We argue that the feature of reconfigurability makes context of use the central issue in the assessment of the societal and moral impact of the technology. It follows that the design of good policies for new application contexts has to be central in a value sensitive design approach to reconfigurable technology. © 2013 The Author(s).

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Dechesne, F., Warnier, M., & van den Hoven, J. (2013). Ethical requirements for reconfigurable sensor technology: A challenge for value sensitive design. Ethics and Information Technology, 15(3), 173–181. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10676-013-9326-1

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