Symbolizes the interrelationship among Ethics, Law and Security where security relies on trust; trust depends on privacy; and privacy is breached if law is not observed and if ethical principles are not followed.
Published in Chapter:
Hexa-Dimension Metric, Ethical Matrix, and Cybersecurity
Wanbil William Lee (The Computer Ethics Society, Hong Kong & Wanbil and Asssociates, Hong Kong)
Copyright: © 2021
|Pages: 17
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-3479-3.ch030
Abstract
Exorbitant spending on cybersecurity continues; hacking proliferates and continues with the aftermath getting more and more damaging, yet data protection must helplessly continue. This is attributable to a vicious circle and culminates in something akin to a chronic disease, aptly called a “chronic problem of data protection.” The situation is complicated by a tripartite relationship, called the “Law-Security-Ethics Connection,” and exacerbated by a muddled view of the key concepts, notably ethics, privacy, and risk, which hinders a wholesome appreciation of the problem. Given the status quo, an ethics-based framework was perceived and developed aiming to lessen the incidence of hacking or make hacking exasperate to mitigate rather than eradicate because hacker-free cyberspace is unrealistic and impossible. This chapter aims to introduce a remedy successively through an exposition of the symptom and cause of the problem, clearing the muddle, and an illustration of the tools: Ethical Matrix and Hexa-Dimension Metric using the Octopus Saga.