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Title: Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants in the Human Body


1
Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants in the Human Body
  • Rafael Capurro
  • Distinguished Researcher in Information Ethics,
    School of Information Studies, University of
    Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA
  • IEEE Symposium on Technology and Society
    (ISTAS10)
  • University of Wollongong, New South Wales,
    Australia
  • June 7-9, 2010

2
Overview
  • Introduction
  • EGE Opinion No 20
  • Scientific and technical background
  • Legal Aspects
  • Ethical Aspects
  • Prospects

3
Introduction
  • The European Group on Ethics in Science and New
    Technologies to the European Commission

4
Introduction
  • The Group is a neutral, independent, pluralist
    and multidisciplinary body, composed of fifteen
    experts appointed by the Commission for their
    expertise and personal qualities.

5
Introduction
  • The task of the Group is to examine ethical
    questions arising from science and new
    technologies and on this basis to issue Opinions
    to the European Commission in connection with the
    preparation and implementation of Community
    legislation or policies.

6
Introduction
  • In order to face the ethical issues that are
    arising with the rapid advances in science and
    technology, the Members represent a broader range
    of professional competences in different
    disciples such as, inter alia, biology and
    genetics, medicine, pharmacology, agricultural
    sciences, ICT, law, ethics, philosophy, and
    theology.

7
Introduction
  • For every full Opinion to be issued by the
    Group, a roundtable is held before the Opinion is
    adopted, to which representatives of the
    Institutions of the European Union, experts of
    the fields, parties representing different
    interests, including NGOs, patients and consumer
    organisations and industrial stakeholders, are
    invited to participate in the debate.

8
(No Transcript)
9
Opinion No 20
  • Ethical aspects of ICT implants in the human body
    (16 March 2005).
  • Opinion produced on the direct initiative of the
    EGE
  • Rapporteurs Prof. Stefano Rodotà and Prof.
    Rafael Capurro
  • http//ec.europa.eu/european_group_ethics/avis/ind
    ex_en.htm
  • Important Notice This PP presents pictures,
    videos and links that are NOT part of the EGE
    Opinion. Please, do not quote the text of the
    Opinion from this PP but do it directly from the
    official text.

10
Introduction
  • At first sight ICT implants are ethically
    unproblematic if we think for instance about
    cardiac pacemakers. However, although ICT
    implants may be used to repair deficient bodily
    capabilities they can also me misused,
    particularly if these devices are accessible via
    digital networks.

11
Introduction
  • The idea of letting ICT devices get under our
    skin in order not just to repair but even to
    enhance human capabilities gives rise to science
    fiction visions with threat and/or benefit
    characteristics.

12
Introduction
  • The intimate relation between bodily and psychic
    functions is basic to our personal identity.

13
Introduction
  • Consequently the objective of this Opinion is
    primarily to raise awareness and questions
    concerning the ethical dilemmas created by a
    range of implants in this rapidly expanding
    field.

14
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Current Applications and Research
  • Applications ICT Implants on the market
  • Active medical devices

15
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Cardiovascular pacers for patients with
    conduction disorders or heart failure
  • Cochlear and brainstem implants for patients with
    hearing disorders
  • Implantable programmable drug delivery pumps for
    patients with Multiple Sclerosis or Diabetes
  • Implantable Neurostimulation Devices
  • Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain
    management
  • Sacral nerve stimulation for control of urinary
    incontinence
  • Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) for seizure control
    in epilepsy and mood control in severe depression
    cases
  • Deap brain stimulation (DBS) for patients with
    Parkinsons disease, for essential tremor
  • Artificial chip-controlled leg

16
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Identification and location devices
  • Read-Only for example allowing to identify
    Alzheimers patients or children
  • Read-Write carrying a set of information (such
    as a persons medical history)
  • Devices with tracking capabilities a device that
    can emit a radio signal which could be tracked
    (RFID, VeriChip)

17
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Research on ICT Implants
  • Medical Devices
  • Biosensors
  • Artificial Hippocampus
  • Cortical implant for the blind
  • Ocular implant or artificial retina
  • Brain-computer interfaces (BCI)

18
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Surveillance or tracking devices
  • Wearable ICT
  • Subdermal GPS
  • Enhancement or commodity devices
  • Prosthetic cortical implant (intelligence or
    sensory amplifiers)
  • Artificial vision
  • Audio tooth implant
  • Artificial hippocampus (to enhance memory)

19
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Other potential uses
  • Microsoft patent Number 6,754,472 June 22, 2004
    concerns the human body as a medium for
    transmission of data (or energy) to other
    devices like PDAs, cellular phones, medical
    devices, RFID, making possible to localize
    persons. The patent does not describe any
    specific device.

20
Scientific and Technical Background
  • Smart guns weapons that can be fired only if
    operated by their owner with a RFID-chip
    implanted in his or her hand.

21
Categorisation of ICT Implants
  • Implantable devices can be categorised as
  • medical
  • non-medical
  • Both as
  • passive
  • active
  • Reversible or non reversible
  • Stand-alone or online
  • ICT implants and tags

22
Future personal tracking devices
  • Integration and miniaturization of three
    technologies www.digitalangel.com
  • Biosensor read a persons vital signs by
    touching the skin (implanted into a wristwatch)
  • Pager device takes the data from the biosensor
    by using a cellular packet module
  • Position location technology using radio signal
    to stay in contact with a persons pager device
  • -gt this information is sent through cellular data
    packets to a data centre (Digital Angel)
  • -gt The first Digital Angel was launched in
    November 2001
  • -gt Medical emergency purposes
  • -gt Identification/Location purposes

23
Legal Background
  • General Principles
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights
  • EU Charter of Fundamental Rights of 2000
  • Convention on Human Rigts and Biomedicine of the
    Council of Europe
  • EU Directives
  • European Constitution
  • National Constitutions

24
Legal Background
  • Human Dignity providing that the human body and
    its parts shall not give rise to financial gain
  • Human Inviolability
  • Privacy and Data Protection
  • The Precautionary Principle
  • Data Minimisation, Purpose Specification,
    Proportionality Principle and Relevance
  • Autonomy and Limits of ICT Implants

25
Legal Background
  • ICT implants may
  • allow individuals to be located on a permanent
    and/or occasional basis
  • Allow the information contained in electronic
    devices to be changed remotely without the date
    subjects knowledge.

26
Legal Background
  • These risks are bound to increase with the
    adoption of unified technical standards, which
    may allow data to be read and modified also by
    entities other than the data subject and the
    bodies/organizations lawfully managing the
    relevant plant or connection.

27
Legal Background
  • Both circumstances are clearly in conflict with
    data protection rules concerning collection and
    processing of the information.

28
Legal Background
  • For the legal background, it should be noted
    that
  • the existence of a recognised serious but
    uncertain risk, currently applying ot the
    simplest types of ICT implant in the human body
    ()
  • The purpose specification principle mandates at
    least a distinction between medical and
    non-medical applications ()

29
Legal Background
  • the data minimisation principle rules out the
    lawfulness of ICT implants that are only aimed at
    identifying patients, if they can be replaced by
    less invasive andequally secure tools
  • the proportionality principle rules out the
    lawfulness of implants such as those that are
    used, for instance, exclusively to facilitate
    entrance to public premises

30
Legal Background
  • the principle of integrity and inviolability of
    the body rules out that the data subjects
    consent is sufficient to allow all kinds of
    implant to be deployed and
  • the dignity principle prohibits transformation of
    the body into an objet that can be manipulated
    and controlled remotely into a mere source of
    information.

31
Ethical Background
  • Contemporary society is confronted with changes
    that have to do with the anthropological essence
    of individuals.

32
Ethical Background
  • There is a stepwise shift in progress after
    being observed, via video surveillance and
    biometrics, individuals are being modified via
    various electronic devices, under skin chips and
    smart tags, to such an extent that they are
    increasingly turned into networked individuals.

33
Ethical Background
  • Thus we might be continuously connected and
    could be configured differently so that from time
    to time we would transmit and receive signals
    allowing movements, habits and contacts to be
    traced and defined. This would be bound to modify
    the meaning and contents of an individuals
    autonomy and to affect their dignity.

34
Ethical Background
  • Fundamental ethical principles
  • Human Dignity
  • Non-instrumentalisation
  • Privacy
  • Non-discrimination
  • Informed Consent
  • Equity
  • The precautionary principle

35
Ethical Background
  • Value conflicts
  • There could be conflict between the personal
    freedom to use ones economic resources to get an
    implant that will enhance ones physical
    capabilities and what society at large considers
    desirable or ethically acceptable.

36
Ethical Background
  • Another value conflict concerns the potential
    conflict between limiting freedom of people
    dangerous to others by surveillance and promoting
    the safety of others.

37
Ethical Background
  • Freedom of researchers may conflict with the
    obligation to safeguard the health of research
    subjects.

38
Ethical Background
  • Concern for economic competitiveness and other
    economic values (economic growth) may come into
    conflict with respect for human dignity.

39
Ethical Background
  • Some Important Knowledge Gaps Regarding ICT
    Implants in the Human Body

40
Ethical Background
  • Human Dignity, Integrity and Autonomy
  • How far can such implants be a threat to human
    autonomy particularly when they are implanted in
    our brains?
  • How far can they have irreversible impacts in the
    human body and in the human psyche?
  • How will they influence human memory?
  • Does a human being cease to be such a being in
    cases where some parts of his or her body
    particularly the brain are substituted and/or
    supplemented by ICT implants?

41
Ethical Background
  • Privacy and Surveillance
  • How far con ICT implants become a threat to
    privacy?
  • How far can ICT implants give an individual, or a
    group, specific capabilities that could become a
    threat to society?

42
Ethical Background
  • Enhancement and Self Awareness
  • What does perfectibility of human beings mean?
  • How far should the use of such implants to
    enhance human capabilities be allowed?

43
Ethical Background
  • Social Aspects
  • How do we relate to persons with ICT implants
    that are connected online?
  • How far should ICT implants remain invisible to
    an external observer?
  • How far can they be used to track human beings
    and in which cases should this be legally
    allowed?

44
Ethical Background
  • ICT Implants for which special caution is
    necessary
  • ICT implants that cannot be removed easily
  • ICT implants that influence, determine of change
    psychic functions
  • ICT implants that could be misused for social
    surveillance and manipulation
  • Military applications

45
Opinion
  • Scope This Opinion focuses on the question of
    ICT implants in the human body. It does not deal
    with the whole field of ICT devices or with
    wearable computing in general, although there
    may be cases in which such devices could be
    considered as quasi implants.

46
Opinion
  • We shall not lay hand upon thee. This was the
    promise made in the Magna Carta to respect the
    body in its entirety Habeas Corpus.
  • In this new world, data protection fulfils the
    task of ensuring the habeas data required by
    the changed circumstances.

47
Opinion
  • At the same time, this is a permanently
    unfinished body. It can be manipulated to restore
    functions that either were lost or were never
    known () again, for the sake of the persons
    welfare and/or social competitiveness, as in the
    case of enhanced sports skills or intelligence
    prostheses.

48
Opinion
  • ICT Implants for health purposes
  • The objective is important
  • The implant is necessary to achieve this
    objective, and
  • There is no other less invasive and more
    cost-effective method of achieving this
    objective.

49
Opinion
  • The individual and the network
  • To the extent that an individual via an ICT
    implant has become part of an ICT network, the
    operation of the whole network not just the ICT
    implant needs to be considered.

50
Opinion
  • Freedom of Research
  • The freedom of research in this field should be
    subjected not only to the informed consent of the
    persons willing to participate in new experiments
    aiming at health recovery but also to the
    awareness of the possibility of damaging not only
    bodily but also psychic functions of the people
    participating in clinical trials.

51
Opinion
  • Irreversible ICT implants
  • The requirements of informed consent and data
    protection (privacy and confidentiality of the
    data in particular) need to be strictly enforced
    in cases where the ICT implants are irreversible
    and cannot be removed from the body without
    severe damage of the individuals life.

52
Opinion
  • ICT implants for non-medical purposes
  • Mental functions and personal identity ICT
    devices should not be used to manipulate mental
    functions or change personal identity
  • ICT implants and personal data the principles of
    data protection need to be applied to this area

53
Opinion
  • Privacy and ICT implants Provided that ICT
    devices are implanted in accordance with the
    principles outlined in this Opinion there is no
    need to declare these implants. They could and
    should remain unrecognizable to an external
    observer. The right to privacy includes the right
    to have an ICT implant.

54
Opinion
  • ICT Implants and Enhancement of Physical and
    Mental capabilities
  • Access to ICT implants for enhancement should be
    used only
  • To bring children or adults into the normal
    range of the population, if they so wish and give
    their informed consent, or,
  • To improve health prospects

55
Opinion
  • The following possibilites should be banned
  • ICT implants as a basis for cyber-racism
  • ICT implants used for changing the identity,
    memory, self perception and perception of others
  • ICT implants used to enhance capabilities in
    order to dominate others
  • ICT implants used for coercion towards others who
    do not use such devices

56
Opinion
  • ICT Implants, Commercialisation and Consumer
    Interests
  • It is essential that ICT devices are not put on
    the market without adequate control. For
    instance, products that can be regarded as
    medical products should be controlled according
    to the relevant legal framework.

57
Opinion
  • ICT Implants for Surveillance Purposes
  • ICT implants for surveillance in particular
    threaten human dignity. They could be used to
    locate people (and also to retrieve other kinds
    of information about them). This might be
    justified for security reasons (early release for
    prisoners) or for safety reasons (location of
    vulnerable children).

58
Opinion
  • However, the EGE insists that such surveillance
    applications of ICT implants may only be
    permitted if the legislator considers that there
    is an urgent and justified necessity in a
    democratic society (Article 8 of the Human Rights
    Convention) and there are no less intrusive
    methods.

59
Opinion
  • Nevertheless the EGE does not favour such uses
    and considers that surveillance applications,
    under all circumstances, must be specified in
    legislation. Surveillance procedures in
    individual cases should be approved and monitored
    by an independent court.
  • The same general principles should apply to the
    use of ICT implants for military purposes.

60
Opinion
  • General Considerations
  • Development of the Information Society
  • The EGE considers that the ethical questions
    related to ICT implants in the human body are
    intimately related to the development of the
    Information Society as a whole.

61
Opinion
  • The EGE strongly supports the vision of a
    people-centred, inclusive and development
    oriented Information Society as proclaimed in the
    Declaration of Principles of the World Summit on
    the Information Society (Geneva 2003).

62
Opinion
  • Public Debate and Information
  • A broad social and political debate is needed as
    to what kind of applications should be accepted
    and legally approved, particularly concerning
    surveillance and enhancement. A precautionary
    approach is recommended by the EGE.

63
Opinion
  • The Member States and their national ethics
    councils (or corresponding institutions) have a
    responsibility to create conditions for education
    and constructive, well-informed debates in this
    area.

64
Opinion
  • Democracy and Power
  • Public debate and education are essential to
    ensure transparency and the Member States have a
    responsibility to ensure that the power of
    development and access to ICT implants are
    decided through democratic processes.

65
Opinion
  • Need for Regulation
  • It is clear that this field needs regulation.
    Currently, non-medical ICT implants in the human
    body are not explicitly covered by existing
    legislation, particularly in terms of privacy and
    data protection.

66
Opinion
  • In the EGEs view, implantable devices for
    medical purposes should be regulated in the same
    way as drugs when the medical goal is the same,
    particularly as such implants are only partly
    covered by Council Directive 90/385/EEC on the
    approximation of the laws of the Member States
    relating to active implantable medical devices.

67
Opinion
  • Impact Research and ICT Devices
  • More research on the long term social, cultural
    and healt impact of different types of ICT
    implants needs to be carried out, with a
    particular focus on risk characterisation, risk
    assessment, risk management and risk
    communication. The EGE considers that this should
    be kept in mind for the Seventh EU Research
    Framework Programme. This sort of precautionary
    research in a rapidly developing field is of
    crucial importance.

68
Opinion
  • Need for review
  • The field of ICT implants is in its infancy and
    rapid developments are taking place that raise
    societal fears as well as hopes. Consequently,
    the EGE has addressed the key ethical issues
    regarding developmentsthat are current or can be
    foreseen at the present time.

69
Opinion
  • However, it is clear that the EGE will have to
    return to this subject to update our advice in
    the light of future applications of ICT implants.
    () Consequently, we consider that a review of
    this Opinion by the EGE may be necessary in about
    three to five years time.

70
Conclusion and Prospects
  • The EGE recommended
  • More research on the long term social, cultural
    and healt impact of different types of ICT
    implants needs to be carried out, with a
    particular focus on risk characterisation, risk
    assessment, risk management and risk
    communication. The EGE considers that this should
    be kept in mind for the Seventh EU Research
    Framework Programme. This sort of precautionary
    research in a rapidly developing field is of
    crucial importance.

71
Conclusion and Prospects
  • Selection of EU projects that have been / are
    dealing with this matter
  • ETHICBOTS (2006-2007) (FP 6)
  • ICTethics (2009-2011) (FP 7)
  • EGAIS (2009-2011) (FP 7)
  • ETICA (2009-2011) (FP 7)
  • For a complete list of Research Programmes
    dealing with ethical questions of ICT under FP7
    see CORDIS Databank
  • http//cordis.europa.eu/pf7

72
  • FP 6 2006-2008
  • http//ethicbots.na.infn.it/index.php
  • Three kinds of integration were analized
  • Human-softbot integration, as achieved by AI
    research on information and communication
    technologies
  • Human-robot, non-invasive integration, as
    achieved by robotic research on autonomous
    systems inhabiting human environments
  • Physical, invasive integration, as achieved by
    bionic research.

73
  • Crucial ethical issues in these areas include
    the preservation of human identity, and
    integrity applications of precautionary
    principles economic and social discrimination
    artificial system autonomy and accountability
    responsibilities for (possibly unintended)
    warfare applications nature and impact of
    human-machine cognitive and affective bonds on
    individuals and society.

74
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75
Conclusion and Prospects
  • The ICTethics project ICT that makes the
    difference
  • The basis of the work is an investigation of the
    ESLA (Ethical, Social and Legal Aspects) of
    Ambient Intelligence
  • ICT for Security
  • http//www.ictethics.eu/

76
Conclusion and Prospects
  • Ambient Intelligence
  • Intelligent Environments Personal Health Systems
    (PHS)
  • Convergence of Physical, Mental and Virtual
    Personal Humanoid Assistent (PHA)
  • Internet of Things Radio-Frequency
    Identification (RFID)
  • ICT for Security Biometrics

77
Conclusion and Prospects
  • ICT that makes the difference. The future of
    Ambient Intelligence and ICT for Security.
    International Conference, Brussels, Nov. 22-25,
    2009
  • http//www.ictthatmakesthedifference.eu/index.html

78
  • Legal aspects
  • 1. RFID. Implants and the human body
  • Legal aspects of ICT implants Stefano Rodotà1,
    Diane Whitehouse2, Penny Duquenoy3 1 La
    Sapienza, Fondazione Basso, Rome (Italy) 2 The
    Castlegate Consultancy, (CITY) (United Kingdom)
    3 Middlesex University (United Kingdom)

79
  • 2. Privacy. Toward an electronically identity?
  • Legal concepts of human identity? Stefano
    Rodotà, La Sapienza, Fondazione Basso, Rome
    (Italy)
  • On Interpreting and Constructing (Non-) Human
    Identities Rafael Capurro International Center
    for Information Ethics, Karlsruhe (Germany)
  • DNA barcoding and personal genomics Giuseppe
    Novelli1 Tor Vergata University (Italy)

80
Conclusion and Prospects
  • EGAIS (Ethical GovernAnce of emergIng
    technologieS) (2009-2011)
  • Aim of the project to overcome the existent
    limitations of the current approaches to ethical
    governance in projects with technical
    development.
  • http//www.egais-project.eu/?qnode/3

81
Conclusion and Prospects
  • ETICA (2009-2011)
  • Aim of the project to identify ethical issues
    arising from information and communication
    technologies in the coming 10 to 15 years.
  • http//www.etica-project.eu/

82
  • How far should we let ICT devices geht under our
    skins?
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