Good Intentions, Bad Inventions: How Employees Judge Pervasive Technologies in the Workplace

October 12, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE pervasive computing

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Authors Marios Constantinides, Daniele Quercia arXiv ID 2210.06381 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Citations 27 Venue IEEE pervasive computing Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Pervasive technologies combined with powerful AI have been recently introduced to enhance work productivity. Yet, some of these technologies are judged to be invasive. To identify which ones, we should understand how employees tend to judge these technologies. We considered 16 technologies that track productivity, and conducted a study in which 131 crowd-workers judged these scenarios. We found that a technology was judged to be right depending on the following three aspects of increasing importance. That is, whether the technology: 1) was currently supported by existing tools; 2) did not interfere with work or was fit for purpose; and 3) did not cause any harm or did not infringe on any individual rights. Ubicomp research currently focuses on how to design better technologies by making them more accurate, or by increasingly blending them into the background. It might be time to design better ubiquitous technologies by unpacking AI ethics as well.
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