Win18_Phil302 Cyberethics’s Updates

Lesson 9: Whistleblowing in the age of Wikileaks

Module 6 Whistleblowing, Lesson 9-- Whistleblowing in the age of Wikileaks

Assignment 14: Before you get started on this lesson, please take the midterm survey that your instructor has assigned you on Scholar.  This midterm will cover information from lessons 1-8.  When you are done you may start on this lesson.

 

Whistleblowing in the age of Wikileaks

When it is ethically required that you expose the wrong doings of your colleagues or even your employer?  Let’s hope you never have to make that decision in your professional career, but if you ever do, it will be helpful to have spent some time now deciding on an answer.  In most of the case studies we have looked at in the course so far and that we will look at later are based on information leaked to authorities and watchdog groups by whistleblowers.  A whistleblower  is a person inside an organization who exposes illegal, dishonest, or suspect information or activities of that same organization, be it a public or private entity.  A person who exposes this same kind of information from outside the organization committing the action is usually called a “watchdog.”  Whistleblowers are in very compromising position as they will almost certainly alienate their coworkers and lose their job.  If the whistleblower is calling out their own country, they may face charges of treason with jail, banishment, or capital punishment as their reward.  Due to the social value of whistleblowing for the safety of consumers and the general public, there are some who work tirelessly to legally protect these people when they come forward.  In the next lesson we will look at some case studies of modern whistleblowers but right now we will focus on what makes whistleblowing different in the digital age.  For instance, do sites like WikiLeaks make it easier for whistleblowers to expose wrongdoing without having to suffer the serious consequences? 

Whistleblowing in the Modern Workplace

Please read Rethinking whistleblowing in the digital age and this article on whistleblowing in modern sports in the age of the internet.  Then read this article on hacking and whistleblowing .

When is it right to turn in your own Government?

Julian Assange believes he has made the world much safer for whistleblowers everywhere.  Ironically, this move may have cost him his freedom, as he remains trapped in the embassy of Ecuador in London.  He has been granted asylum in Ecuador but if he leaves the embassy to travel there he will be arrested by British authorities and extradited to Sweden for alleged sexual offenses.  You can read some of the complicated story here.  He still lives a rich life on the internet and is the editor in chief of the WikiLeaks website along with other publishing activities.

Please watch this video where Assange explains why the world needs WikiLeaks.

Assignment 15: Writing reflection (200-400 words) posted to the comments section below—What is whistleblowing? Why or why don’t you agree with Julian Assange on the value of anonymous whistleblowing? Pick one of the examples from the articles we read, or one you may know of in your own life, do you think the situation was resolved ethically?  If so explain why and if not argue your conclusion.  In both cases use the theories we have learned in this class.

  • Cassandra Abad
  • John Sullins
  • Lucia Pulido
  • Carlos Gonzalez
  • Samantha Levy
  • Grant St. Martin
  • Jennifer Guerrero
  • Natalie Keys
  • Caitlyn Balich
  • Rachel Bertram