09 Otba 2014 English
09 Otba 2014 English
09 Otba 2014 English
29
12momentousof
We need to look at some theories on how best to 18ethically communicate this recorded
information while preserving privacy. Here we must address a more subtle privacy 19breach, the
collection and recording of data about a user without his or her knowledge or consent. When
searching on the Internet, the browser software records all manner of data about our visits to
various websites which can, for example, make web pages load faster next time you visit them. Even
the websites themselves use various means to record information when your computer has
accessed them. Some websites are able to detect which other sites you have visited or which pages
on the website you spend the most time on. And this happens all the time, without you being aware
of it.
Further, information technologies are now storing user data in the cloud meaning that the data is
stored on a device remotely located from the user and not owned or operated by that user. This
ease of access has the result of also making the relationship one has to one's own data more
20tenuous because of the uncertainty about the physical location of that data. Since personal data
requires protection, the third parties that offer cloud services need to understand the
responsibility of the trust the user is placing in them.
3 18
20tenuousthin,
weak
21veracitytruthfulness 21cedingtransfer,
identity might be stolen and used to facilitate fraud and 22larceny. The victims of these crimes can
have their lives ruined as they try to rebuild their credit ratings and bank accounts. This has led to
the design of computer systems that are more difficult to access and the growth of a new industry
dedicated to securing computer systems.
Assuming we are justified in granting access to some store of information that we may be in control
of, there is a duty to ensure that that information is useful and accurate. You must have experienced
that not all searches are equal and it matters which search provider you use. All searches are
filtered to some degree in order to ensure that the information the search provider believes is most
important to the user is listed first.
If we are told a link will take us to one location on the web and yet when we click the tab we are
taken to some other place, we may feel that this is a breach of trust. This is often called
clickjacking and 23malicious software can clickjack a browser by taking the user to some site
other than the one expected; it will usually be 24rife with other links that will further infect your
machine or sites that pay the clickjacker for bringing traffic to them .
Lastly, we must address the impact that the access to information has on social justice. Information
technology was largely developed in the Western industrial societies during the twentieth century.
Certain societies and social classes have little to no access to the information easily available to
those in more well off societies and in developed nations, while some of those who have some
access, have that access heavily 25censored by their own governments. This situation has come to
be known as the 26digital divide, and despite efforts to address this gap, it may be growing wider.
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Machine learning and prediction is based on complex logic and mathematics. This complexity can
result in slightly incorrect prediction at times. It might interpret the data of someone's friends and
acquaintances, his or her recent purchases, and other social data, which might result in the
mistaken classification of that person as a potential terrorist, thus altering that person's life in a
powerfully negative way (Sullins 2010). It all depends on the design of the learning and prediction
32algorithm, something that is typically kept secret.
Sample Questions
1.
Barun uploaded a photo taken with Aliya to his online albums. He tagged the photo with
"Barun and Aliya Tyagi at Gayatri's Birthday Party" and linked the photo to Aliya's profile.
This action revealed Aliya's full name and the fact that Barun, Aliya, and Gayatri know each
other. Thus, Barun has unintentionally revealed a great deal of information about Aliya
without her knowledge. In other words, Aliya's efforts to protect her identity may be easily
nullified by others' behaviour. This problem, which we call involuntary information leakage, is
becoming a serious threat to privacy because of the popularity of social network services.
How would it be possible to be proactive and guide the technology in ways that would
increase the moral and reasoning capabilities? Give examples by reading the text.
2.
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Marking Scheme
Question 1:
Outline Answer
Value Points
Analysis
Marks
2
4
4
Value Points
Marks
Analysis
Morally wrong
Elaboration
be supernatural, such as prayers, incantations or exorcisms; but, not much will get done at the local
human level.
Slowly attitudes began to change. In the 4th century A.D., a Christian bishop urged compassion for
the retarded. In the 9th century in Baghdad, the Caliph ordered that those getting out of hospitals
should be given a sum of money to tide 'them over until they could go to work.
We know that there are between 30 and 40 million disabled persons in this country and about 450
million in the world. Just the fact that we can count them, even approximately, is a mark of our
progress. In the Middle Ages young children were not even counted in the census because it was
assumed that most of them would die by the age of twelve. Why bother counting?
Another indication of concern and our openness to the subject is the fact that there are 120
organisations for the disabled. There are more than 130 wheelchair basketball teams. A totally deaf
woman holds the world speed record for driving a vehicle on land. The President of Hofstra
University is a man with cerebral palsy. Recently a young blind woman was involved in a down-hill
skiing competition in Switzerland, while two other blind skiers and four sighted companions set out
to ski across Lapland.
In the area of entertainment, we have had the play "Butterflies are Free", about a blind young man,
and "Whose Life Is it, Anyway?" about a quadriplegic veteran. The movie "Inside Moves", deals with
disabilities. The television movie, "Elephant Man," dealt with one who was grossly deformed. A
retarded boy was permitted to play himself in a movie about the retarded instead of having the role
played by a professional actor. From Seattle, you can rent a film about a boy who lost both legs and
went on to become a football coach. In Dallas, a television station devotes several minutes each day
to advertising 'available children'. These children are not for sale for immoral purposes but they are
handicapped children available for adoption.
Yet with all this progress we must admit that there are still problems. Many of them are in the area
of employment.
Of those who are paralysed, almost 90 per cent are unemployed. Of the blind, 70 per cent are
unemployed or underemployed. Harold Krents, a graduate of Harvard Law School, and inspiration
for the movie and play, "Butterflies are Free", applied to forty law firms before he got a job. .
Taking it all together, the good and the bad, I think it is not unreasonable to say that if one must live
as a handicapped person, this time and this place is one of the best that history has known.
Next, I would like to talk especially to those of you who are parents of blind children about some
tentative suggestions as to how you can help your child and yourself. I do this with some hesitation
because I knew so much more about child rearing before we had children than I do now.
One of the first things you can do is to believe sincerely that raw fish tastes good. I use this example
because we have a Japanese student who has stayed with us often who assures me that raw fish is
delicious. My mind says it's true. My stomach says, don't touch it. It is hard for us really to believe
that people can enjoy food which we consider repulsive. In the same way, it is hard for us to believe
that others can be happy without all the things that make us happy. For example, people will look at
one who is blind and say, "How terrible, how tragic, how miserable it must be without sight." Yet, I
can assure you from my personal experience and from contact with many blind people, that
blindness need not result in constant unhappiness. Keep in mind that we have no reliable external
measures of happiness, no brain scan, no blood test. About the best we can do is to ask people if
they are happy. While I may be better informed on the happiness of blind people than you, still
when it comes to deaf-blindness, my own reaction is very similar to yours. I find myself thinking,
"How tragic, how difficult." I read recently about a man and wife, both deaf-blind, taking training at
the Helen Keller Centre on Long Island. When they want to communicate, one goes to the kitchen
table and pounds on it to make the floor vibrate. Then they meet at the table and if they are angry
they spell words into each others hands rapidly. My reaction was, "How tragic, how inadequate,
how frustrating. How much better it would be if they could shout at each other, or better still if they
could see each other and make faces." Or would it be better? Who are we to say that their way of
communicating feelings or frustration is better or worse than ours? This same deaf-blind man laid
tile for his basement floor; he hung paper on the walls of his kitchen, and he travels around the city
by subway. Is he less happy than we are? I doubt it. Yes, he does miss out on things you and I take
for granted. Is he aware of what he is missing? Yes, to some extent I am sure the deaf-blind are
aware that life could be simpler and less real and do the best you can. Allow handicapped persons
to do the same. If they like raw fish, let them eat it.
My next suggestion for you as parents is that you be like the character in magazine ads for Hastings
piston rings years ago. They showed a picture of a big muscle man with a scroungy beard with a
friendly smile, and the caption was, "Tough, but oh so gentle". That is a good motto for parents to be
tough, but gentle. It is especially apt for the parents of handicapped children. Just being a parent, of
any child, means that you have to be gentle and protective or the child will not survive the first few
years of life. Yet, somewhere along the way, you have to be as tough as the mother bear who cuffs
the cubs on the snout to let them know that now is the time to leave home and get out on their own.
It will be especially hard for you as parents of a blind child to watch your child bump into things or
get cut and bruised and still to sit back calmly and say, "live and learn." But handicapped children,
more than others, need to have such toughening experiences if they are to grow up as sturdy oaks
instead of delicate African violets. All through life, society will tend to overprotect and shelter those
who are disabled. They will need a little extra measure of toughness, of assertiveness, of
independence if they are to get their fair share of rights and freedoms. It may help you in learning to
be tough if you will remember that most of the accidents that, after that happen to blind people are
not serious, and almost never fatal. The greatest damage is always to the loved ones who watch
things happen, and to the pride of the blind or disabled person.
Last winter I was hurrying to the chapel for a convocation programme. I took a short cut along a
narrow sidewalk, got too far off to the left side, and got clipped just above my left eye by a tree
branch stump where it had been cut off. The branch drew blood, and I knew it. I had no more than
sat down in the chapel than one of my students came along and said, "Oh, you're hurt; are you all
right?" I said, "Yes," and I wanted to tell him to go away and let me suffer in silence. After chapel, I
did not want to go back to the office because I knew the secretary would notice and make a fuss. I
didn't even want to go home for lunch because I thought my wife would wrap me in bandages and
keep me in the house for a month. What was hurt was my pride. I had demonstrated to others that I
was careless, or worse, that blind people can't walk across the campus without bumping into things.
You can help most if you will encourage your child to be independent, to move out, to take risks. If
there is a cut or a bruise, be cheerful about cleaning it up and applying a bandage and then go about
your business. If you can do that, you will be saying most eloquently to your child, "I have
confidence in you; keep trying."
My last suggestion to you is to believe in yourself. You are here at this conference to get help and
reassurance from various experts. I am sure they have much to offer and 1 hope you will learn from
them. Never forget that in one way you are more expert than any teacher, counsellor or psychiatrist
you will ever meet. You are expert in knowing how it feels to have your life and your life blood
wrapped up in a handicapped child, and to live with that investment twenty-four hours a day, every
day of the year. That is very different from being a professional helper who deals with the problem
for an hour a week, or an hour a day, or even six hours a day. We need professionals who can be
detached and objective and sometimes we, as parents, need to learn some of that detachment of
perspective. If ever the professional helpers get so detached that they forgot the depth of our
feelings, please feel free to remind them that you, too, have some expertise. Some years ago, 1 came
across a book by a French psychoanalyst, Alfred Adler. In the first chapter of his book he wrote,
"When parents come to me with a problem about their child and they tell me what they have been
doing, my first response is to say, 'I think you're on the right track,' because parents carry a heavy
burden and they need all the support they can get." I wish I could meet that psychoanalyst and hug
him and say, 'Thank you for understanding."
I want you to learn all you can from the professionals here or wherever you are. I might even agree
with them that you need to change your behaviour in some ways. I do not want you to feel that you
are stupid and worthless and that you are not doing anything right. If you do that, you won't be a
good role model for your child. I want your child to be happy, but part of that will come about if
your child sees you as parents who find life enjoyable and challenging. So - listen to the experts, but
also trust yourself.
If I may summarise briefly, let me remind you how far we have come in a mere two thousands
years, such a little time in the long history of the world. Next, believe in raw fish; that is, give
handicapped people much freedom in deciding what they enjoy. Try to be both tough and gentle;
and, finally, listen to others but also trust yourself. I think the greatest gift you can give your child is
a zest for living, a spirit of wonder and adventure, and a confidence that the problems of life can be
solved or endured.
10
In the words of a Chancellor, who was both a tyrant and a romantic, Otto von Bismarck, "With
confidence in God, put on the spurs and let the wild horse of life fly with you over stones and
hedges, prepared to break your neck, but always, without fear."
If that is a bit too romantic, let me suggest two lines from a Kipling poem. A Russian who spent
seven years in Siberia said that these lines helped sustain him. "If you can fill the unforgiving
minute with sixty seconds worth of distance run, yours is the world and all that's in it, and which is
more, you'll be a man, my son."
11
corrected that heart problem, but in those days they didn't have sophisticated heart surgery. And
this mouldy biscuit was the last biscuit my brother had eaten before his death.
As a doctor, I have always found the suffering of children particularly heartbreaking -especially
because of their total trust in doctors and nurses. They believe you are going to help them. If you
can't, they accept their fate. They go through mutilating surgery, and afterwards they don't
complain.
One morning, several years ago, I witnessed what I call the Grand Prix of Cape Town's Red Cross
Children's Hospital. It opened my eyes to the fact that I was missing something in all my thinking
about suffering - something basic that was full of solace for me.
What happened there that morning was that a nurse had left a breakfast trolley unattended. And
very soon this trolley was commandeered by an intrepid crew of two-a driver and a mechanic. The
mechanic provided motor power by galloping along behind the trolley with his head down, while
the driver, seated on the lower deck, held on with one hand and steered by scraping his foot on the
floor. The choice of roles was easy, because the mechanic was totally blind and the driver had only
one arm.
They put on quite a show that day. Judging by the laughter and shouts of encouragement from the
rest of the patients, it was much better entertainment than anything anyone puts on at the Indiana
polis 500 car race. There was a grand finale of scattered plates and silverware before the nurse and
ward sister caught up with them, scolded them and put them back to bed.
Let me tell you about these two. The mechanic was all of seven years old. One night, when his
mother and father were drunk, his mother threw a lantern at his father, missed and the lantern
broke over the child's head and shoulders. He suffered severe third -degree burns on the upper part
of his body, and lost both his eyes. At the time of the Grand Prix, he was a walking horror, with a
disfigured face and a long flap of skin hanging from the side of his neck to his body. As the wound
healed around his neck, his lower jaw became gripped in a mass of fibrous tissue. The only way this
little boy could open his mouth was to raise his head. When I stopped by to see him after the race,
he said, "You know, we won." And he was laughing.
The trolley's driver I knew better. A few years earlier I had successfully closed a hole in his heart.
He had returned to the hospital because he had a malignant tumour of the bone. A few days before
the race, his shoulder and arm were amputated. There was little hope of his recovering. After the
Grand Prix, he proudly informed me that the race was a success. The only problem was that the
trolley's wheels were not properly oiled, but he was a good driver, and he had full confidence in the
mechanic.
Suddenly, I realized that these two children had given me a profound lesson in getting on with the
business of living. Because the business of living is joy in the real sense of the word, not just
something for pleasure, amusement, recreation. The business of living is the celebration of being
alive.
12
I had been looking at suffering from the wrong end. You don't become a better person because you
are suffering; but you become a better person because you have experienced suffering. We can't
appreciate light if we haven't known darkness. Nor can we appreciate warmth if we have never
suffered cold. These children showed me that it's not what you've lost that's important. What is
important is what you have left.
Sample Questions
1.
How, according to both Dr Christiian Barnard and Dr Walter Stromer is happiness subjective?
Elaborate your answer with examples from the text and from your own experience.
2.
Shabana is a 16 year-old who currently lives with her parents in Ajmer. She had no noticeable
sight problems until she was 6 years old. She continued to live a normal life and could see
with glasses until the she was 8. When she was about 15 years old Shabana lost her sight. This
was the most difficult time in her life as she dropped out of school, rarely going out or meeting
her friends because of her condition. One of the things she says is, I cannot do the things I
enjoy anymore.
How would you encourage her to take up the challenges of daily life? Give examples by
reading the text.
Marking Scheme
Question 1:
Outline Answer
Value Points
Two children one suffering from cancer and having faced Analysis
amputation, one burnt and blinded by his mother getting Elaboration
drunk and throwing a lantern
Conclusion /
Do not blame fate, anyone for any suffering
Interpretation
Enjoy themselves, make best of what they have
Marks
2
4
4
Value Points
Analysis
13
Marks
2
Elaboration
14
4
4