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Friedman, Batya – 1990
Noting a recent increase in the number of cases of computer crime and computer piracy, this paper takes up the question, "How can understanding the social context of computing help us--as parents, educators, and members of government and industry--to educate young people to become morally responsible members of an electronic information…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Copyrights, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Interuniversity Communications Council (EDUCOM), Princeton, NJ. – 1987
Focusing on issues surrounding the unauthorized copying of software, this pamphlet is particularly concerned with the illegality of such action and the necessity for educators to respect the intellectual work and property of others. Some relevant facts about unauthorized copying of software are followed by a statement of principle about…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Computer Software, Copyrights, Higher Education
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Rawlinson, David R.; Lupton, Robert A. – Journal of Education for Business, 2007
Students' attitudes and perceptions regarding the use of unlicensed software are important to educators and businesses. Students have a proven propensity to pirate software and other intellectual property. By understanding how attitudes and perceptions toward software piracy differ among university students in a cross-national context, educators…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Computer Software, Information Technology, Foreign Countries
Wholeben, Brent Edward – Collegiate Microcomputer, 1987
Discusses the issues of ethics, equity, and values in the use of computers in education. Conceptual foundations of computer software are described; responsibilities of the software author, marketer, and user are reviewed; and the conflicts between personal property rights and individual liberty are explored. (LRW)
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education, Equal Education