"Ownership and responsibilityThere is variance within the technology community on how it sees its responsibility regarding A/IS. The difference in values and behaviors are not necessarily aligned with the broader set of social concerns raised by public, legal, and professional communities. The current makeup of most organizations has clear delineations among engineering, legal, and marketing functions. Thus, technologists will often be incentivized in terms of meeting functional requirements, deadline, and financial constraints, but for larger social issues may say, “Legal will handle that.” In addition, in employment and management technology or work contexts, “ethics” typically refers to a code of conduct regarding professional behavior versus a values-driven design process mentality.As such, ethics regarding professional conduct often implies moral issues such as integrity or the lack thereof, in the case of whistleblowing, for instance. However, ethics in A/IS design include broader considerations about the consequences of technologies."p.130