Syllabus
Date |
Topics |
Due |
Presenters |
1. Tuesday 2019-03-12
|
Introduction |
|
|
2. Friday 2019-03-15
|
Critical Thinking Guest Speaker
|
1. Chapter 1 - Catalysts for Change
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Appendix A - Plagiarism
4. Discussion Board: Movies
4. Sign up for individual presentation
|
Paige Neumann - WPI Librarian
|
3. Tuesday 2019-03-19
|
Ethics |
1. Chapter 2 - Introduction to Ethics
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Paper 1: Technology
4. Wiki: Technology Timeline
|
|
4. Friday 2019-03-22
|
Freedom of Speech |
1. Chapter 3 - Networked Communications
2. Interview at end of chapter
|
1. Emily Mahoney - Negative Children
2. Carla Inacio - Deep Fakes
3. Haozhe Jiang - Pulling Us Apart
|
5. Tuesday 2019-03-26
|
Intellectual Property
Guest Speaker
|
1. Chapter 4 - Intellectual Property
SKIP Interview at end of chapter
2. Prepare questions for guest speaker
|
0. Frank Gerratana - IP Lawyer
1. Patrick Lee - Nintendo Emulation
2. Nathan Bargman - AI Creates
3. Chris Guerrette - Power of Piracy
|
6. Friday 2019-03-29
|
Privacy |
1. Chapter 5 - Information Privacy
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Paper 2: Self Search
|
1. Vinit Kothari - Too Many Android Privacy Permissions
2. Xavier McLean - They're Watching You
3. Brian Fay - Selecting Your Feed
|
7. Tueday 2019-04-02
|
Privacy Class Cancelled |
1. Chapter 6 - Privacy and the Government
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. National ID Debate Prep (paper optional)
|
1. Alek Hersum - Gunman's iPhone
2. Meha Mohapatra - Hackable, Your Online Behavior
3. Yaru Gong - Spy Probe Box Calling
|
8. Friday 2019-04-05
|
Crime |
1. Chapter 7 - Computer and Network Security
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Group Project web site progress through topics covered in class to date.
|
1. Peter Jankowski - Lenovo Superfish
2. Ryan Beaver - Small Drone Security
3. Matt Agular - Malwarebytes
|
9. Tuesday 2019-04-09
|
Errors Failures Risks
Guest Speaker
|
1. Chapter 8 - Computer Reliability
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Paper 3: Code Testing
|
0. Brannen Hough - Patriot Missile Engineer
1. Oliver Sanderson - Autonomous Weapons Systems
2. Matthew Gulbin - Self Driving Vehicle Safety
3. David Vollum - Boeing 737 Max
|
10. Friday 2019-04-12
|
Professional Ethics |
1. Chapter 9 - Professional Ethics
Read the newly released Code of Ethics at:
https://www.acm.org/code-of-ethics
instead of the one in the text book.
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Game Debate Notes (paper optional)
|
1. Liam Setterlund - Recent Whistleblowers
2. Morgan Langstaff - Classroom VR
3. Jacob Tutlis - Licensing Software Engineers
|
11. Tuesday 2019-04-16
|
Work
|
1. Chapter 10 - Work and Wealth
2. Interview at end of chapter
3. Group Presentation Draft
4. Paper 4: Automation
|
1. Ivan Eroshenko - Financial Transforming AI
2. Jerry Assan - Richer Rich, Poorer Poor
3. Noelle Morgan - Robot Ed
|
Friday 2019-04-19
|
NO CLASS |
|
12. Tuesday 2019-04-23
|
Group Presentations
|
1. Non-presenter Questions
1. Frankenstein (1931) -
Ryan Beaver,
Matthew Aguiar,
Xavier McLean,
Peter Jankowski,
Alek Hersum
(KAP)
2. Akira (1988) -
Patrick Lee,
Alan Curiel,
Jerry Assan,
Matthew Gulbin,
Vinit Kothari
(KAP)(KT)
3. Ghost In The Shell (2017) -
Haozhe Jiang,
Fan Mo,
Yaru Gong,
Ivan Eroshenko,
Luke Ypsilantis
(KAP)
4. Meha Mohapatra - Hackable, Your Online Behavior
|
13. Friday 2019-04-26
|
Group Presentations
|
1. Non-presenter Questions
1. Cube (1997) -
Jacob Tutlis,
Nathan Bargman,
Oliver Sanderson,
Brian Fay,
Luke Zebrowski
(KAP)
2. Robots (2005) -
Morgan Langstaff,
Emily Mahoney,
Christopher Guerrette,
Saul Woolf,
Noelle Morgan
(KAP)
3. Black Panther (2018) -
Errica Chen,
Liam Setterlund,
Meha Mohapatra,
Carla Duarte,
David Vollum
(KAP)
4. Alek Hersum - Gunman's iPhone
|
14. Tuesday 2019-04-30
|
- Student Topic Choice
- Rain Date: IP Guest Speaker
- Rain Date: Errors, Failures, Risks Guest Speaker
|
1. Group Evaluations
|
1. Fan Mo - Making a Living with Open Source Software
2. Luke Zebrowski - Choosing Who Lives
3. Saul Woolf - Mob Rules
4. Yaru Gong - Spy Probe Box Calling
5. Meha Mohapatra - Hackable, Your Online Behavior
|
Weekly Time Guideline
4 hours class time
4 hours reading (2 chapters ~90 pages @ 2 minutes per page)
8 hours practicing mastery of material
- papers, group project, class activity preparation
--
16 hours / week
The Syllabus will change throughout the course as new
interests are found and as material is covered ahead or behind
schedule. Changes will be made in class and recorded in the class slides.
You will be responsible for the material in the assigned reading.
If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a
disability, or if you have medical information to share with me,
please make an appointment with me as soon as possible.
If you have not already done so, students with disabilities, who believe
that they may need accommodations in this class, are encouraged to contact the
Disability Services Office (DSO), as soon as possible to ensure that
such accommodations are implemented in a timely fashion. The DSO is
located in the Student Development and Counseling Center, (508) 831-4908.
Located on the 2nd floor of Salisbury Labs (SL233), the Writing Center is
a valuable resource for helping you improve as a writer. Writing Center
tutors are your peers (other undergraduate and graduate students at WPI) who
are experienced writers themselves and who enjoy helping others work through
thinking and writing problems. Although a single tutoring session should
never be seen as a quick fix for any writing difficulty, these sessions can
help you identify your strengths and weaknesses, and teach you strategies
for organizing, revising, and editing your course papers, projects, and
presentations. Writing Center services are free and open to all WPI students
in all classes, and tutors will happily work with you at any stage of the
writing process (early brainstorming, revising a draft, polishing sentences
in a final draft). Visit the Writing Center website
wpi.edu/+writing to make an appointment.