Information Technology Acts
The advancement of information technology has generally been considered to be a good thing, but there are also problems that have been created by it. Some of these have to do with the lack of privacy, and others have to do with the protection of the most vulnerable members of society. Two acts will be discussed here: the Children's Internet Protection Act of 2000 and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) of 1991. In both cases, the advancement of information technology created ethical issues that led to the need for the acts. When individuals and companies work to create new technology, it seems as though they often do not spend much time thinking about the possible ramifications of that technology. In some cases the technological advances are used in ways that were not expected, so the ramifications could not have been realistically seen or envisioned at the time in which the technological advance was actually created.
The Children's Internet Protection Act of 2000 came about because of the risk of children being exploited online. Teachers and schools had to agree to filter and protect their students' Internet activities in order to ensure that children would be less likely to be exposed to any kind of Internet predator. Libraries were also required to protect children that same way, and harmful content had to be banned for children under eighteen years of age (McClure & Jaeger, 2009). Schools and libraries that failed to comply with the law would not be able to get specific types of federal funding, which could seriously harm what they could offer to both children and adults. Libraries challenge...
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