DocumentCode
758984
Title
Ethics and teaching information assurance
Author
Endicoytt-Popuvsky, B.
Author_Institution
Seattle Univ., WA, USA
Volume
1
Issue
4
fYear
2003
Firstpage
65
Lastpage
67
Abstract
Has the US become an ethically challenged nation? If so, what does that mean for information assurance (IA) educators? The annual Computer Security Institute (CSI)-Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) Computer Crime Survey, typically a barometer of computer crime in the US, presents alarming statistics about rising digital crime rates over our public networks. The survey, which gathered voluntary responses firm US corporations and government agencies, reports that computer crime incidents are reaching epidemic proportions. The erosion of teaching and practicing ethics, coupled with the widespread belief that the Internet provides unbreakable anonymity for users, is a recipe for disaster. The paper discusses ethics in an IA curriculum and IA educational recommendations.
Keywords
computer crime; computer science education; professional aspects; security of data; teaching; Computer Crime Survey; Internet; US; computer crime; computer science education; curriculum; data security; educational recommendations; ethics; information assurance education; teaching; Computer crime; Computer security; Education; Ethics; Information security; Internet; Law; Privacy; Protection; Statistics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Security & Privacy, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1540-7993
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSECP.2003.1219073
Filename
1219073
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