Scenarios
Scenarios
Scenarios
10. 10.18. A small company oers you a programming job. You are to work on new versions of its software product to disable copy-protection and other access controls on electronic books. The companys program enables buyers of e-books to read their e-books on a variety of hardware devices (fair uses). Customers could also use the program to make many unauthorized copies of copyrighted books. The companys Web page implicitly encourages this practice. 11. 10.21. Suppose you came to the U.S. from Kosovo 15 years ago. You now have a small software company. You will need to hire six programmers this year. Because of the devastation by the ware in your homeland, you have decided to seek out and hire only programmers who are refugees from Kosovo. 12. 10.23. You are the president of a small computer-game company. Your company has just bought another small game company that was developing three new games. You look them over and nd that one is complete, ready to reproduce and sell. It is very violent and demeaning to women. It would probably sell 200,000400,000 copies. You have to decide what to do with the game. 13. 10.25. In 1990, the campaign of a gubernatorial candidate in Massachusetts distorted a digital image of his opponent in a television interview to make the opponent appear more menacing. 14. 10.31. The faculty at a large university requested that the campus store sell an electronic device, AutoGrader, that students would use when taking machine-scorable tests. Students would enter test answers into this personal electronic device and then send the answers via infrared signal to the instructors computer in the classroom. Once all the answers are received, the instructors computer immediately grades the test and sends the students scores back to their devices. Suppose you are a university dean who must decide whether to allow use of this system.