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  2. Programming ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programming_Ethics

    Programmers should work to develop computer systems that can reduce negative consequences to society, such as threats to safety and health, and that can make everyday activities and work easier. It is “an obligation to develop to high standards” (Savage). [3] Avoid harm to others. Computer systems have an indirect impact on third parties.

  3. Information technology law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_technology_law

    Information technology law (IT law), also known as information, communication and technology law (ICT law) or cyberlaw, concerns the juridical regulation of information technology, its possibilities and the consequences of its use, including computing, software coding, artificial intelligence, the internet and virtual worlds.

  4. Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_and_Other_Laws_of...

    The book has been widely cited, and Lessig has repeatedly achieved top places on lists of most-cited law school faculty. [5] [6] It has been called "the most influential book to date about law and cyberspace", [7] "seminal", [8] and in a critical essay on the book's 10th anniversary, author Declan McCullagh (subject of the chapter "What Declan Doesn't Get") said it was "difficult to overstate ...

  5. Lehman's laws of software evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehman's_laws_of_software...

    A P-program is written to implement certain procedures that completely determine what the program can do (the example mentioned is a program to play chess) An E -program is written to perform some real-world activity; how it should behave is strongly linked to the environment in which it runs, and such a program needs to adapt to varying ...

  6. Structure, sequence and organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structure,_sequence_and...

    The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit noted that computer programs are literary works under U.S. law. [11] The court reasoned that with literary works a non-literal element is protected to the extent that it is an expression of an idea rather than the idea itself. By analogy, the purpose or function of a software work would be the work's ...

  7. Computer ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_ethics

    Computer ethics is a part of practical philosophy concerned with how computing professionals should make decisions regarding professional and social conduct. [1]Margaret Anne Pierce, a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Computers at Georgia Southern University has categorized the ethical decisions related to computer technology and usage into three primary influences: [2]

  8. Conway's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway's_law

    Evidence in support of Conway's law has been published by a team of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard Business School researchers who, using "the mirroring hypothesis" as an equivalent term for Conway's law, found "strong evidence to support the mirroring hypothesis", and that the "product developed by the loosely-coupled ...

  9. Legal informatics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_informatics

    Artificial intelligence and law (AI and law) is a subfield of artificial intelligence (AI) mainly concerned with applications of AI to legal informatics problems and original research on those problems. It is also concerned to contribute in the other direction: to export tools and techniques developed in the context of legal problems to AI in ...