Ethics
Ethics
What is ethics?
• An active forrtprint is where the user has deliberately shared information about
themselves
• For example, through posting or participating on social networking sites or online
forums
• Other activities that contribute to active digital footprint include an online form-
such as subscribing to a newsletter- or agreeing to accept cookies on your browser.
Passive digital footprint
• A passive digital footprint is created when information is collected about the user
without them being aware that this is happening.
• For example, this occurs when websites collect info about how many times user
visit, where they come from and their IP address.
• This is a hidden process, which users may not realise is taking place
Why do digital footprint matter?
• They are relatively permanent, and once the data is public, as may be the case with
Facebook post. The owner has little control over others will use it.
• Words and photos which you post online can be misinterpreted or altered, causing
unintentional o ence.
• Cybercriminals can exploit your digital footprint- using it for purpose such as
phishing for account access or creating false identities based on your data
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How to protect your digital footprint?
• Data protection law exists to ensure that everyone in every workplace is working
towards the same principles and practices.
• Intellectual property rights means the legal rights given to the inventors or creator
to protect his/her invention or creation for a certain period time.
• Trademarks, patents and copyrights are di erent types of intellectual property
rights.
• Department of Industrial Policy & Promation- Indian Patent O ce (IPO), Controller
General of Patent,Design and Trademark (CGPDTM)
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The Patent Act (1970)
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The Copyrights Act, 1957
• This act protects the expression of an idea rather than the idea itself.
• It is a legal entitlement given to the originators of creative works, including
literature, art, music, drama, lms, audio & software.
• The creators can have exclusive rights to control and use their creations and
prevents others from copying, distributing, exploiting their work without
permission
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Why we need copyrights?
• Legal evidence
• Public Notice
• Statutory Damages & Attorney’s fees
• Enforcement and Protection
• International Protection
The Trade Marks Acts (1999)
• Creative Commons (CC) licenses are public licenses. You can use them to indicate
what other people are allowed to do with your work. Each work is automatically
protected by copyright, which means that others will need to ask permission from
you as the copyright owner.
GPL(General Public Licence)
• It is a free software license that gives users the right to run, study, share, and modify
software. It's a type of copyleft license, which means that any derivative work must
be distributed under the same or similar license terms.
Apache
• The Apache License is a free, open-source license that allows users to use, modify,
distribute, and sell software without paying royalties. It's written by the Apache
Software Foundation (ASF)
CYBERCRIME
What is cybercrime?
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Eavesdropping
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Ransomware
• Malicious software
• Harmful to the computer
• Slow-down the system
• Malfunctioning of applications
• Threat to security
Types of Computer Virus
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Trojan Horse