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| report:eth [2026/03/25 10:15] – [6.1 Introduction] team5 | report:eth [2026/04/26 18:57] (current) – [6.2 Engineering Ethics] team5 | ||
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| It covers: | It covers: | ||
| - | - Engineering Ethics: An analysis of passenger interaction and consent, focusing on data privacy (the non-collection of personal data in Phase 1 versus audio storage in Phase 2) and accessibility concerns | + | - Engineering Ethics: An analysis of passenger interaction and consent, focusing on data privacy (the non-collection of personal data in Phase 1 versus audio storage in Phase 2) and accessibility concerns. |
| - | - Sales and Marketing Ethics: An evaluation of the project' | + | - Sales and Marketing Ethics: An evaluation of the project' |
| - | - Environmental Ethics: | + | - Environmental Ethics: |
| - | - Liability: A discussion on the distribution of responsibility regarding physical and electrical safety in a high-traffic transit environment, | + | - Liability: A discussion on the distribution of responsibility regarding physical and electrical safety in a traffic transit environment, |
| - Summary: The final conclusions detailing the specific design, material, and technical choices implemented by the team to uphold these ethical standards. | - Summary: The final conclusions detailing the specific design, material, and technical choices implemented by the team to uphold these ethical standards. | ||
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| ==== 6.2 Engineering Ethics ==== | ==== 6.2 Engineering Ethics ==== | ||
| - | * Passengers are informed about the installation via a notice on the carriage door - is that enough | ||
| - | **Phase 1:** | + | Connect is designed to interact with passengers in a shared public space. |
| - | * passengers choose whether to grab the handrail | + | This raises questions about professional responsibility, |
| - | | + | inclusive design.The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Code of Ethics requires engineers to hold paramount the safety, health, and welfare of the public, and to protect the privacy of others [(ieee2020ethics)]. These principles works as a guidance when the team approach passenger interaction and data handling throughout the project. |
| - | * the system does not store, transmit, or log any data | + | \\ |
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Informed interaction and passive consent**\\ | ||
| + | Passengers interact with the installation by gripping a handrail, which is an action they would perform regardless of the installation' | ||
| + | placed on the carriage door. This approach provides passive consent: passengers are informed before entering, and their engagement remains voluntary. No active sign-up or agreement is required. Since Phase 1 collects | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Privacy and data minimisation**\\ | ||
| + | In Phase 1, the system | ||
| + | does not identify who is pressing, collect biometric data, or transmit | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | In Phase 2, passengers may voluntarily choose to submit a message via a web platform accessed through a QR code near the exit doors. Participation is entirely optional. However, voice messages constitute personal user-generated content, and the platform must handle this responsibly in accordance with the GDPR [(gdpr2016)]. Voice messages are transcribed and reviewed through automated content moderation tools prior to being made available on the platform. Questions of data ownership and retention period should be clearly communicated to users on the platform.\\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Accessibility**\\ | ||
| + | The installation relies on passengers gripping a handrail. To ensure that the experience is accessible to all passengers, including those who use wheelchairs, | ||
| - | Accessibility: | ||
| - | * the installation relies on grabbing a handrail — does it exclude passengers who don't or can't? | ||
| - | * sensitive users: how to not exclude light sensitive users | ||
| - | * how to make passengers aware of whats happening so they don’t expereience confusion: elderly, people with cognitive issues, vision impaired users | ||
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| - | **Phase 2:** | ||
| - | * voice messages are user-generated and voluntarily submitted | ||
| - | * the platform stores audio content — who owns it, who has access, how long is it kept? | ||
| - | * reflective questions prompt personal sharing — is there a risk of emotional manipulation or false sense of safety? | ||
| ==== 6.3 Sales and Marketing Ethics ==== | ==== 6.3 Sales and Marketing Ethics ==== | ||
| + | Although Connect originates as a student project within the European Project Semester at ISEP, it is developed and presented as a real product concept with potential for deployment in public transport systems. This framing means that ethical considerations around commercialisation are relevant. The IEEE Code of Ethics requires that engineers act in a manner that avoids | ||
| + | deceptive acts and maintains honesty and integrity in all communications [(ieee2020ethics)].\\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Potential customer types**\\ | ||
| + | Two types of customers have been identified. One is a municipality or public transport authority adopting Connect in the public interest represents a relatively unproblematic relationship: | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Transparency toward passengers**\\ | ||
| + | Regardless of who funds the installation, | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Data and commercial interests in Phase 2**\\ | ||
| + | In Phase 1, no user data is collected, which eliminates the risk of data monetisation. In Phase 2, voice messages are submitted voluntarily by users and constitute personal data subject to the GDPR [(gdpr2016)]. A commercial sponsor must not have access to this content for marketing purposes. The team's position is that user-generated content in Phase 2 belongs to the platform and is used solely for the purpose of the installation, | ||
| + | ==== 6.4 Environmental Ethics ==== | ||
| - | Two potential customer types with different ethical implications: | + | Environmental responsibility was considered during the material selection and system design phases of the project. The choices made reflect an awareness of the environmental impact of the components |
| - | + | \\ | |
| - | **Municipality, | + | **Enclosure material**\\ |
| - | Public interest framing, supporting social cohesion — relatively unproblematic ethically\\ | + | The electronics enclosure is 3D printed using Nanovia PA Rail, a composite polyamide filament certified to NF EN 45545-2 for use in railway environments [(nanovia_pa_rail)]. The material was selected for its fire safety properties, because it is non-flammable, low smoke, and low toxicity characteristics [(nanovia_pa_rail)]. It is a petroleum-based polymer, which is not biodegradable, |
| - | **Commercial sponsor**\\ | + | \\ |
| - | Raises questions about whose interests the installation serves — does a sponsor' | + | **Electronic components**\\ |
| - | + | The system uses a WEMOS C3 Mini microcontroller (ESP32-C3-based), | |
| - | Phase 1: | + | \\ |
| - | * no user data is collected, so commercial exploitation of data is not possible — this is an ethical strength worth stating | + | **Phase 2 infrastructure**\\ |
| - | Phase 2: | + | The web platform |
| - | * voice messages are personal user content — a commercial sponsor having access to or ownership | + | ==== 6.5 Liability ==== |
| - | + | ||
| - | **Transparency** | + | |
| - | * Passengers should know who is behind the installation | + | |
| - | * Risk of the installation being used as a marketing vehicle rather than a genuine public art piece — how does the team ensure the original intent is preserved regardless of who funds it? | + | |
| - | ==== 6.4 Environmental Ethics ==== | + | |
| - | * PLA enclosure is biodegradable | + | |
| - | * Electronic | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Phase 2: the web platform requires server | + | |
| - | ==== 6.5 Liability ==== | + | |
| - | Phase 1: who is responsible if something fails electrically or physically | + | Because Connect |
| - | Safety standards | + | \\ |
| - | Phase 2: who is liable for the content | + | **Physical safety |
| - | The team as designers | + | Passengers grip handrails that contain embedded velostat sheets, wiring, and LED components. The materials must be safe for repeated physical contact and must not create |
| - | ==== Summary ==== | + | \\ |
| - | //Provide here the conclusions of this chapter and make the bridge to the next chapter.// | + | **User-generated content (Phase 2)**\\ |
| + | The introduction of a voice message platform in Phase 2 raises | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | **Sponsor and operator responsibility**\\ | ||
| + | If the installation is commercially sponsored or operated by a transit authority, the distribution of liability between the team as designers, the sponsor, and the metro operator | ||
| + | hosts user content over time. The data stored need to be separated from commercial interests.\\ | ||
| + | ==== 6.6 Summary ==== | ||
| - | Based on this ethical and deontological analysis, the team chose <specify here the design, technique(s) | + | This chapter has examined the ethical dimensions of the Connect installation |
| - | Consequently, | + | across engineering ethics, sales and marketing ethics, environmental ethics, |
| + | and liability. The analysis informed a number of concrete design decisions.\\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | Based on this ethical and deontological analysis, the team chose velostat pressure sheets as the sensing technology which does not store data and Nanovia PA Rail as the enclosure | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | The team decided to design a solution with passive consent signage on the carriage door, an accessible sensor point at a lower position on the pole, no data logging in Phase 1, and a content moderation pipeline in Phase 2. The following | ||