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Tech experts and leaders should be ‘struck off’ under new regulation proposed to tackle unethical behaviour, the Swindon-based professional body for computing has argued in its manifesto.

Strike off unethical tech bosses, professional body urges next government

The Swindon-based professional body for IT has said it will revoke chartered status from any member found to be in breach of its Code of Conduct at the conclusion of the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry.

The pledge comes as BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT calls for tech experts to be ‘struck off’ in the same way as doctors and solicitors are if they act unethically.

Practitioners in AI and other high-stakes tech roles should be publicly registered and held to account by the next government says the BCS in its pre-election manifesto.

In its Computing Revolution manifesto, BCS sets out three priorities for the party winning the UK General Election on July 4:

  • Anyone with a significant role in IT should prove their accountability by being professionally registered. This includes leaders who use technology in critical national infrastructure like health, defence and other public services. In practice this means being Chartered, just as we expect for accountants.
  • Every UK child and adult must have access to world class computing and digital education. We need an applied computer science GCSE option, teaching practical ways in which computing can be used safely and responsibly. We also need a new digital literacy qualification, equivalent to the GCSE.
  • Closing the diversity gap in information technology can solve many of its issues around trust, bias and safety – over 500,000 women are ‘missing’ from the profession. People over 50 and people with disabilities are also under-represented.

‘Sanctions with teeth make it meaningful to be an AI professional’

Alastair Revell, president of BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT said: “Whoever comes to power this summer will preside over the rapid adoption of AI and the challenge of unlocking its benefits safely and ethically.

“How do you know who the good people making decisions about this technology really are? They should be the ones prepared to subscribe to the public register after an assessment of their ethical values and technical competence; in the full knowledge, that if they are found wanting, we will remove them.

“Sanctions with teeth make it meaningful to be an AI professional and build public trust in tech as a force for good.

“The Post Office inquiry and related cases are a powerful example of this. If, when these investigations conclude, any member is found wanting under our Code of Conduct then BCS will take immediate disciplinary action.

“But even when BCS does that, we can’t stop people from practising, because we don’t regulate them.

“I would like to see the future government make Chartered status a licence to practice in key areas of computing, like AI. This effectively turns removal from the register into an act of being ‘struck off’ for good.

“Unlike a driving licence, we also need that registration to be renewed regularly to ensure competence in a rapidly evolving profession.”

Image by Andrea Piacquadio at Pexels.com

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