SCI 199Y: The Impact of Society Upon Computers
Some possible project topics
"The proper study of humans is humanity" -- Alexander Hupope
These topic ideas will be discussed some time in the first few classes.
See notes below.
Your topic must be approved and you need to circulate a "blurb" in advance.
- Science and disloyalty
- John Harrison's clocks
- Calendars
- Spiritualism and artificial agents
- Other renaissance topics? Mediaeval topics?
- Data collection and social stratification
- Computers and the Second World War
- Population tracking
- basic social planning and censuses
- what the "punch card" meant to average people
- IBM's involvement on the world stage
- Security (including law-enforcement) tracking of individuals, by government and non-governmental agencies
- Database aggregation
- Electronic security systems (lock systems)
- Privacy issues
- RFID
- Public anger at computer failures; lack of public anger at computer failures
- Risk management and computers
- 14 August 2003 blackout
- Computer users' rights
- Workplace issues
- The human-computer interface
- "Computer Lib"
- Computer "priesthood"
- The advent of microcomputers in the 1970s
- Populist computer movements
- "The software flap"
- The Citizen Lab
- Personal uses of cryptography
- Computers as argumentation
- Computer technology specifically intended to supplant something
- The "paperless office"
- e-cash
- Communications topics
- Cell phones, pagers
- Internet access: public access unix, e-mail, home broadband, internet cafés
- Advertising on the internet (especially the web)
- "Deregulation" and communications networks
- "All software sucks" (muttered by sysadmins everywhere). Why?
- Bloatware
- Microsoft monopoly
- Forces in favour of low-quality software
- The World-Wide Web
- Subtopics about its effect on high-speed internet access at home; the domain name system; then indirectly internet security (good and bad); etc.
- Access to government via the web (its effect on society)
- "Blogs" (web logs)
- High-speed home internet service
- The enemy built in to your computer
-
(many possible subtopics)
- Our computer agents against the enemy
-
(several possible subtopics)
- Computer security
-
(a few possible subtopics)
- "Social engineering"
- The impact of computers on society. -- The feedback loop: computers affect society and this paves the way for further changes to the computers (e.g. by popular outcry!).
- Workplace issues
- People's complicity with large-scale data tracking efforts
- Telephone solicitation and spam and similar
- "Information overload"
- Alien computer science
- Some failures of society to have an impact upon computers.
I have some ideas and references for each of these topics.
You should work out a title and
"blurb" for your topic in consultation with me;
this blurb and any suggested references will be posted on the course web page
by Friday of the previous week.
Here are some
general things which can be discussed about a deployment-of-technology topic.
I also have some specific suggested questions in mind for many of these topics.
- Technical background (brief -- mostly geared towards understanding the human issues, although a little coolness is permitted)
- How much choice do people have in the matter? That is, how much of the way something works is technical and how much is policy/politics?
- Who is making the decisions?
- What are their goals in making these decisions?
- What do the policy-makers say?
- What do their adversaries say?
- What reasoning can you bring to bear on the matter? (Be concrete rather than speculative here.)
- What effect is this policy actually having? (positive and negative)
- Whom do these effects hinder and whom do they serve?
- Is it worth it? That is, do the benefits outweigh the consequences? Does this differ between affected populations?
- Is there a proposal to ameliorate the negative effects?
- Is this being enacted? Why or why not? What are people's motivations and what are they accomplishing?
[main course page]