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Mozilla Businesses Firefox Technology

Mozilla Wants Young People To Consider 'Ethical Issues' Before Taking Jobs In Tech (vice.com) 107

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: The Mozilla Foundation, the non-profit arm of the company known for its privacy-friendly web browser Firefox, released a guide today for helping students navigate ethical issues in the tech industry, in particular, during the recruitment process. The guide advises students not to work for companies that build technology that harms vulnerable communities, and to educate themselves "on governance" inside companies before taking a job. It also discusses unions drives, walkouts, petitions, and other forms of worker organizing.

The guide, which takes the form of a zine titled "With Great Tech Comes Great Responsibility," follows events hosted by the Mozilla Foundation last fall in partnership with six university campuses, including UC Berkeley, N.Y.U., M.I.T., Stanford, UC San Diego, and CSU Boulder. Not so subtly, it calls out Amazon, Palantir, and Google, which have faced backlash in recent months from tech workers as well as students on the campuses where they recruit.
"Addressing ethical issues in tech can be overwhelming for students interested in working in tech. But change in the industry is not impossible. And it is increasingly necessary," reads the opening of the 11-page handbook -- citing military contracts, algorithmic bias, inhumane working conditions in warehouses, biased facial recognition software, and intrusive data mining as causes for concern.
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Mozilla Wants Young People To Consider 'Ethical Issues' Before Taking Jobs In Tech

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  • Not impressed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by enigma32 ( 128601 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @07:57PM (#59646014)

    I'm not impressed. This seems more like an attack on Google, et al., than something that's actually helpful to students starting out in the industry.

    Discussion around these issues is important, but I don't think it's appropriate for Mozilla to explicitly call out other companies like this. There's enough of that happening these days already.

    • Discussion around these issues is important, but I don't think it's appropriate for Mozilla to explicitly call out other companies like this.

      What about being a corporation rightly should shield them from criticism?

      There's enough blind obedience to the corporation these days already. ;-)

    • When I did my Degree we had to take a subject called Engineering Ethics. Which was really just ethics, it was interesting but a waste of time. It did talk about recycling and the damage that industry could do to the planet (That is to say we were lectured on it) also we were encouraged to think about cradle to grave of products. Glad we did not have to take lectures on this stuff, it was bad enough at the time.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Environmental concerns are just a small part of it, these days more important are the effects that technologies have on democracy and society.

        Take Facebook. Parts of it are toxic and do people real harm. It's leaked vast amounts of personal data. Been used by foreign powers to manipulate democracy and sow discontent among the population.

        Facial recognition and automated sentencing decisions are both areas where we have seen bias in the systems people built. That's the kind of thing that needs to be taught.

        • Not denying Facebook can be toxic. But, really, you don't need all these newfangled "social media" companies to find online toxicity. The internet has been a den of toxicity as long as I've had access to it, going all the way back to the alt. hierarchy on usenet. Growing a thick skin and learning to ignore assholes was always kind of a prerequisite for spending a lot of time online. For my part, Facebook offers an acceptable value proposition. And I have it trained such that I see little of the toxicity any

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            I've never seen anything on Facebook that would *EVER* have made me consider voting for the current occupant of the white house.

            Of course not. People like you who would never vote for him are not the targets, it would be a complete waste of time because as you say it will not change your mind.

            Facebook offers tools to very precisely target ads to people who might change their minds, who are close but just not quite over the line. Additionally because it's a social network it's great for creating bubbles to trap people in, where they self-select to be victims.

            Best part is people outside of all this don't even see it, and don't think a

            • I very much doubt facebook ads had any real influence on anything. Facebook itself and social media in general probably had a tremendous impact but mostly via peer to peer communication. This is underscored I think by the focus on memes and their contents rather than political ads in general.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I read TFA and they mention two things Google did as examples of ethical issues in tech:

      - Project Maven, the Pentagon contract, which employees petitioned against and which was eventually dropped after sustained pressure.

      - Banning political discussion at Google, which the Labour Board decided was illegal.

      Those are both very relevant lessons, and I wouldn't class it as an attack on Google.

    • I'm not impressed. This seems more like an attack on Google, et al., than something that's actually helpful to students starting out in the industry.

      Discussion around these issues is important, but I don't think it's appropriate for Mozilla to explicitly call out other companies like this. There's enough of that happening these days already.

      Oh, it's more than that. This is more Mozilla dick-waving. For all their preening wokeness, if it were up to Mozilla employees, all you BadThink people out there would lose access to everything from technology to employment.

      After what their mob did to Brendan Eich, I hope the whole damn foundation goes kaput.

  • Don't work in IT at any Fortune 500 companies then?
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        If you work at a bunch of Fortune 500 companies, recruiters will assume that you don't want to work for a small to medium company. The hiring managers at small to medium companies will assume that you might abandon them when the right Fortune 500 job comes along.
    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      I can already see the reddit trolls "Damn Millennials are looking for even more reasons to be unemployed! Laziest generation ever! When I was a kid we murdered minorities before breakfast, while driving down the road in our old pickup spewing as much black smoke as we could, throwing our garbage at squirrels. And that's how we liked it."

  • How is Mozilla now that the company is more progressive? Did that fix the bugs?
  • But... Google has "Do No Evil" in it's mission! Oh. Wait. Yea... I forgot...
  • here are the cheat codes for that video game you can't stop playing
  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:14PM (#59646054)

    and starving to death, vs the ethics of working as a mindless drone for some nameless, faceless corporate monstrosity?

    A shitty job at a shitty company is a badge of honor, and if you're going to be an IT professional, expect lots of job hopping and extremely ephemeral employment.

    Once you have a job, it's much less problematic getting a new one.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:48PM (#59646130) Homepage Journal

      and starving to death, vs the ethics of working as a mindless drone for some nameless, faceless corporate monstrosity?

      Seriously, those are the only two choices?

      Truthfully, most people don't have the luxury to be picky about jobs they take. But the best, the pick of the litter, they *do* have choice. And the best matter very, very much to tech companies. So if you *do* have a choice of roughly comparable jobs, why not consider what that job means to you?

      • Most people have choice, they just don't know how to take advantage of that ability. So as a result they take they first job that comes to them, and are afraid to change. And employers are happy to leave them like that.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I wouldn't even say "roughly comparable", sometimes the ethical issues are overwhelming.

        I've turned down jobs that paid a lot more than my current one on ethical grounds before. We are talking child labour and marketing tobacco products to kids. There is a line you shouldn't cross, a very fuzzy line.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      From the youngsters I know right now, they're living in Mom's basement off of child support from Dad, whom they refuse to talk to because he tells them to get a job while Mom encourages their "mental health days". Unless they're black, in which case Mom is living off of the child support from the state. As racist as it sounds, the number of single mothers is so outrageous, over 70% for black children, the current teen generation thinks their future comes from the hands they're busy biting. If you think I'm

    • "A shitty job at a shitty company is a badge of honor, and if you're going to be an IT professional, expect lots of job hopping and extremely ephemeral employment."

      Let's just rearrange this for the vast majority of employees.

      "...if you're going to be an IT professional...expect...A shitty job at a shitty company..."

      It only took me 35 years working in the IT industry as contract and permanent employment to learn that! ha ha!

  • Ethics (Score:5, Insightful)

    by trogdor_linux ( 5052565 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:14PM (#59646058)
    What about these ethics of firing the CEO because he was a Christian who believed what Christians have always believed about marriage?
    • When did that happen? If you're referring to Mozilla and Brendan Eich, that never happened. Nice try.
      • Re:Ethics (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Doctor_Jest ( 688315 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @08:30AM (#59646978)

        He was forced out of his job by the mob. Mozilla capitulated because Eich donated PERSONALLY to Prop 8 efforts. Nice try. When he was Chief Technology Officer, people inside Mozilla were aching to get rid of him because of his Catholic beliefs. It's not in dispute, even from secular news. If you think you have a better explanation, I'm sure Brendan and Mozilla (and the rest of the Internet) would love to hear it.

  • My priorities (Score:5, Interesting)

    by LenKagetsu ( 6196102 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:16PM (#59646066)
    My priorities are simple. My food, my shelter, my means of income, and then your needs come after that.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Well said, that my friend is the "elephant in the room" of this discussion.

      A social conscience is like a garden outhouse, you try to swallow it and it will stick in your throat!

      Sure we all like to think were eco-friendly, anti-animal testing or whatever our primary cause is to save the planet, but truth is that you'll take practically any job from any company when it looks like your your fridge is empty and the rent is due in a couple of weeks. This is especially true if you don't have higher education cert

    • And the very people who do things you don't like also have the same priorities.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      One of the great things about living in a socialist democracy like the ones in Europe is that those basic needs are guaranteed so you don't have to worry too much about them. No matter how bad things get you will have food, shelter, medical assistance and some help to get your life back on track.

      It's far from a perfect system but it takes the edge off the way people think and behave towards each other, at least to an extent.

    • My priorities are simple. My food, my shelter, my means of income, and then your needs come after that.

      This is true, but one wonders how much people really worry about it, especially when you see all the unnecessary, stupid shit people buy. Even "poor" people. On credit. While complaining about the wealthy, handing capitalists their money by borrowing thousands from them to be paid back at interest.

  • ...okay, I'm now done considering.

    I still wanna get rich above all else. Next!

  • Get woke go broke (Score:2, Informative)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
    Another stupid attempt at making young people "woke", as if they weren't big enough assholes already.
  • Ya ... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:39PM (#59646112)

    Mozilla Wants Young People To Consider 'Ethical Issues' Before Taking Jobs In Tech

    ... I'll consider that after considering having to pay my bills. Maybe people with rich parents to support them while they consider their "options" have the luxury of picking and choosing the jobs they'll deign to accept/decline, but the rest of us have live in the real world.

    In other words: First World, Rich People problems.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Heh. I just got a recruiter call from Google, and told them to get stuffed because of their firing of James Dalmore means they fire people for peaking truth, and the $90,000,000 golden parachute means they reward predators for raping their own staff.

      The "censure truth, permit rape by leaders" message from Bill Clinton's presidency keeps playing out in various politically correct institutions who mouth platitudes while committing crimes and abusing the public, and I don't care to help them with it. Fortunate

    • In other words: First World, Rich People problems.

      Yes, it is. So why SHOULDN'T they consider it? Are you saying that, because being able to choose a job is a first world rich people problem, rich people in the first world SHOULDN'T consider the ethics of potential employers? If first world rich people don't consider ethics, who will?

      • by DogDude ( 805747 )
        A certain type of person believes in "winning" at all costs, and don't have a shred of decency or compassion for anybody else (ie: the Orange Asshole). I've learned to just steer clear of those people. There's nothing you can do for/about them.
        • The problem is you have people here on Slashdot who you'd think would be nowhere near as bad, but here they are all arguing for not considering ethics ever because no one is a saint, and that they're not rich enough to consider ethics.
          • by DogDude ( 805747 )
            I agree. I spend less time on Slashdot than I used to for just this very reason. It used to be full of smart, at least decent people, but it's gotten much less so in the past year or so. It's a shame. I don't know of anywhere on the Net where decent people gather for discussions, any more.
  • Missing section (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jimshortz ( 6309880 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:43PM (#59646122)
    "Be sure to work for employers who punish their employees for their personal beliefs like we do".
  • by nicolaiplum ( 169077 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:51PM (#59646138)

    Has Mozilla been considering the companies that are actually flatly illegal?

    How about Uber's / Lyft's entirely illegal taxi services and employer tax evasion (by trying to deny they employ drivers)?
    How about Deliveroo / Doordash / etc paying less than minimum wage?
    How about AirBNB's entirely illegal hotel/apartment renting and shafting of local people in tourist destinations who are priced out of their rented apartments?

    Bashing the FAANG is all fashionable, but they're not even the most evil companies. They're just the most powerful ones.

    Mozilla are right that you should think about ethics - and you should think about ethics of more than the biggest companies in the world!

  • by BuckB ( 1340061 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:58PM (#59646148)

    Ironically, the guide itself is very irresponsible. Obviously written by a 50+ year old ex-hippie.

    In their "Timeline," they advocate for those that campaigned for the release of "computer programmer Clark Squire." Clark Squire, aka Sundiata Acoli, was convicted of a 1973 murder of a state trooper. Incomprehensible that they draw out this example in their brief timeline.
    They, of course, are anti-Military and anti-ICE, applauding those that deleted code they had written in protest. A responsible article would have couched the decision to support the Military or ICE as something to consider, not bad at the outset.
    They come to the incorrect conclusion about bias in the Northpointe/COMPAS parole algorithm. It's not human biases that are programed into the software, it's statistics. Specifically, the study says "The authors found that the average risk score for black offenders was higher than for white offenders, but that concluded the differences were not attributable to bias."
    Then, they offer advice - "nonprofit or government actors researching AI...are worth exploring" and small companies "are more likely to be in a financial crunch and possibly resistant to making decisions for ethical reasons."

    Worth the read to see how old hippies think.

  • Pot meet kettle (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @09:17PM (#59646184)
    an organisation that takes money from the likes of google wants OTHERS to consider ethical issues? seriously?
    • Exactly. What a wacky world. Mozilla has been selling user data and performing monitoring of its users for decades.

    • This is all about appearance. The hypocrisy makes me sick.
    • Is this any different than when Linus Torvalds takes a patch for the Linux kernel from Microsoft?
      You can take money from others with differing views on Free Software (this is still /. right?) just so long as it doesn't influence your views and judgements. This is different from "political donations" (perhaps better understood as "political investments") which seek to altar a person's actions and positions based on money paid.

      • Very Different. If Linus was out telling everyone NOT to accept patches from companies while doing it himself you would have a case. basically Mozilla are doing EXACTLY what they are telling others not to do.
  • Has Mozilla considered the ethics of spending donations on buying a company providing them a window into what people are viewing with their browser after removing the functionality needed to let them have extensions which perform the same function locally instead of "in the cloud"?

  • The cost of housing in my city (I'm not even American) and the cost of housing across the world.

    I have very little time for ethics, with a wife to look after and rent / mortgages being high as HELL. We're rapidly approaching Lord Grantham style era here, where we all just live on some bastards GIANT property as his slaves, we get a small shack in return for looking after the ponys in the stables.

    Ethical issues indeed.

      • I'm in Aus, EXACTLY the same bullshit here. Tens of thousands of poorly constructed, over priced, shitty apartments, no one wants to live in.

        Built for the Chinese. Tying up developers, builders and lands, raising the prices of 'normal' dwellings and creating nothing but a plague.

        Only people gaining from it are Govt in taxes and fees and developers. The locals are shafted, it's a disgrace.

    • This is an age-old problem. Our ancestors crossed oceans and continents to find opportunity and an environment where they could make something better for themselves. Just change your zip code instead of feeding the beast.
  • by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @10:17PM (#59646266)

    I can understand not taking a job at a company that builds land mines disguised as children's toys or something, but in a lot of cases the ethics are extremely complex. Does providing law enforcement with better tracking technology help or hurt? How about improved precision military weapons? Computer games that are so much fun that people play them too much - was CIV a good thing or an evil thing?

    I think its OK to at least be aware of possible ethical issues, but also to be aware that sometimes the issues are complex.

    • They are, but there are tests and guideposts along the way.

      For example, what happens if everyone does the basic thing in question? If everyone who has the ability to help protect the nation choses not to, the nation will cease to exist shortly thereafter, and the people will no longer be able to chose such things for themselves. If choice leads to not being able to chose ever again, it is the wrong one.

      It is wrong to help punish the innocent or to deny their freedom. But, to prevent the apprehensio

  • Average fresh grad has close to $100K in student loan debt. Jobs are in big cities, where housing is at sky high prices. Only companies who pay enough money to counterbalance these adversities are the ones who has no qualm about ethics. Hmmmm... A big conundrum. Should I eat or should I work for a company with higher ethics ? I don't know about you but, I think of myself first before the rest of the world. It is called self preservation and comes from your genes, not something you were taught in the liberal
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Sorry, but that's bullshit.

      According to the College Board, the average cumulative student debt balance in 2017 was $26,900 for graduates of public four-year schools and $32,600 for graduates of private nonprofit four-year schools.

      That's a far cry from your absurd $100K claim.

      There are also plenty of jobs in rural America where the cost of living is cheap. If your average Feminist Dance Therapy graduate can learn to push some buttons on an automated assembly machine at a factory in, say, South Carolina, they

    • "Is mozilla going to help financially ?"

      Yes, by suggesting ethical considerations Mozilla is now beholden financially, otherwise they're massive hypocrites. Good catch. Also, fancy IT jobs are only available in Manhattan or Silicon Valley. Truly these hard times will evolve a generation of magnificent stallions.
    • That is totally false for your number.
      According to the New York Times the number is actually around $29,900 for 2019 that is for all private and public loans.
      To reach that $100,000 number there are only 6.1% of graduates that borrow that much and the people doing that are going into medical.
  • Of course any thinking person should do this.
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @01:40AM (#59646568)
    Do not do unto others what you do not want done unto you.

    It's amazing how many Slashdot nerds don't even want to consider it, and that it's anyone else's problem but theirs.

    If someone or some employer does something shitty to you, you Slashdot nerds deserve it because you've loudly proclaimed that ethics is someone else's problem.
  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @09:01AM (#59647052)
    Defending yourself is ethical. That should go without question.

    Defending your community is ethical. Protecting people from harm cannot be otherwise.

    Defending your nation is ethical. It is your community, your family, and yourself.

    Working for those who secure your nation, providing them with the means and support to do so, is entirely ethical. To say otherwise is simply absurd.

    A nation in which the people decide not to secure it will be conquered by any nation in which the people are not free to make such a choice.

    It is a profoundly anti-ethical lie to tell people that working towards the security of their nation, family, friends, and neighbors is wrong. To do so is to encourage people to use their freedom to end their freedom; to bring suffering to their loved ones; to end that which gave them the opportunity to help keep them safe.

    Not everyone is needed to provide for the nation's security, but if no-one does then no-one has it and all die.

    Thus, Mozilla is encouraging national suicide. They are telling those who can help protect everyone else that they should refuse. They are inverting the very concept of ethics and proclaiming that which is evil to be what is good.

    • Ethics!=Morality.
      If your nation is the DPRK, helping the Kim family is ethical. If your ruler is Pol Pot, then helping him maintain dominance during the bloody Khmer Rouge was ethical. Were you an Iraqi during Saddam Hussein's regime, crushing rebellions using chemical weapons would also be ethical -- you're merely supporting the security of your country.
      Your reasoning is ethical and yet amoral.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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