Ethics
Why ‘Explicit Uncertainty’ Matters for the Future of Ethical Technology
To address algorithms’ potential harm, companies must be willing to focus on users and rethink their business models.
To address algorithms’ potential harm, companies must be willing to focus on users and rethink their business models.
Companies that manage employee data responsibly are better able to grow trust across the company while gaining insights.
A new article series explores how organizations must manage and monitor technology in new ways to achieve positive ethical outcomes.
This Strategy Guide shares insights on AI use for strategic advantage and positive societal impact.
Elizabeth Renieris of the Notre Dame-IBM Technology Ethics Lab discusses how businesses can responsibly govern AI projects.
Connecting through collaboration and conflict, preventing leader derailment, and assessing the impact of leaders’ unethical requests.
When leaders ask employees to cross ethical lines, they risk reducing workers’ long-term performance.
Employers can vet people more ethically and accurately with explainable AI.
Rethinking political donations, creating a human-centered company, and how good citizenship sparks bad behavior.
The days of claiming to be apolitical while buying influence through donations to politicians should be over.
When team members do good deeds, their leaders can be susceptible to bad behavior. Here’s why.
Preserving public trust, evaluating a female-focused recession, and regulating a tech crisis.
Business — and society — should think of the governance of AI as an enabler rather than a constraint.
Employee surveillance practices are increasing along with remote work arrangements. But can companies do it ethically?
Data-driven culture, ethics and compliance standards for pandemic aid, and effective global operations.
Companies offering aid in a crisis must clarify the ethical and legal ramifications of their actions.
Companies can better support individual and community well-being through a people-centered approach to profitability.
MIT Sloan’s Sinan Aral discusses social media as a marketing tool that can have a positive impact — if used ethically.
SAP’s Max Wessel explains why advisory board guidance is critical in innovation.
How to boost innovation capacity and institutional pride, and addressing tech inequity and the ethics of automation.