“Is It Moral To Work For A Tech Giant?”
John G. Messerly
2020-04-18 00:00:00
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Working for Tech Companies

The tech giants---Apple, Google, Facebook, Microsoft---undoubtedly do things that aren't in the public interest. Think about how Facebook allows the blatant dissemination of falsehoods in political material, a policy that subverts the integrity of the electoral process and undermines social stability. Moreover, much time is wasted on Facebook, YouTube contains a lot of junk, and staring at your Apple phone all day has its downsides. This list could go on.

Of course, not always serving the common good isn't a unique feature of tech companies; other corporations do sinister things too. Oil companies fund climate change denial, thereby increasing the chance of a future environmental catastrophe that threatens the species' survival; tobacco companies systematically suppressed evidence of the lethality of their products for decades, leading to millions of deaths. This list could go on too.

So it's hard to single out tech companies for criticism---especially as a transhumanist. If only science and technology properly applied can save us, and if rich tech companies support important research in artificial intelligence, robotics, nanotechnology, and longevity research, then we need big tech. Furthermore, if the American government won't fund such research, then big tech companies are the only ones who might step up.

I do believe that tech companies have civic responsibilities, but taking such responsibilities seriously depends largely on creating a new economy, since the drive for profit, as opposed to increasing societal good, is a large part of the problem. We need an economic system that doesn't emphasize profit, weaponize disinformation, encourage despoiling the natural environment and climate, and create vast wealth inequality.

But if you have a job at a tech company and you have moral qualms about how they use their technology, then your choices include:




  1. ignore your moral reservations and use the money (power) your job provides to help yourself and others, influence the political system, support worthy causes, etc. (Thus using a (partly) corrupt system's money against them and their unjust practices.)

  2. change the company from within if that's feasible;

  3. find a company whose values more align with your own;

  4. move to a less corrupt country than the USA (because otherwise, your taxes will support some things that don't align with your values no matter who you work for);

  5. become a slacker if you have enough money and avoid working altogether;

  6. live "off the grid" so as to be even less complicit in governmental corruption.



No doubt my readers can imagine other options.

What Work Should We Do and Why?

No matter what you choose remember that we live in a world where money is power. Money can then be used either for either good (Bill Gates, Warren Buffett) or ill (Charles Koch, Sheldon Adelson.) So leaving your job will decrease your ability to do good unless, for example, you can make more money doing something else. The way the system is set up, you just have to have something to be able to give something.

While I am sympathetic to opting out of the system, it is nearly impossible to avoid the global social-economic-political system altogether. No matter what you do or where you go you are enmeshed within it. In addition, if we push our concerns about causing harm to their logical limit, simply living and consuming resources may be morally problematic. Living itself may entail a kind of existential guilt. Afterall what we necessarily consume---food, clothing, shelter---is unavailable to others if we consume them.

I suppose the philosophical problem is, to put it simply, how to do good in an imperfect and sometimes bad world. Unfortunately, I don't think there is any way to live in an imperfect world that isn't (somewhat) complicit in evil. What then should we do? Here is how I answered the question in a previous essay, "Should You Do What You Love?"




So what practical counsel do we give people, in our current time and place, regarding work? Unfortunately, my advice is dull and unremarkable, like so much of the available work. For now, the best recommendation is: do the least objectionable, most satisfying work available given your options. That we can’t say more reveals the gap between the real and the ideal, which is itself symptomatic of a flawed society. Perhaps working to change the world so that people can engage in satisfying work is the most meaningful work of all.




Assuming you find work that isn't too objectionable and somewhat satisfying, what is the point of doing that work? Here's what I wrote in "Fulfilling Work."




In the end, we are small creatures in a big universe. We can’t change the whole world but we can influence it through our interaction with those closest to us, finding joy in the process. We may not change the world by administering to the sick as doctors or nurses or psychologists, or by installing someone’s dishwasher, cleaning their teeth or keeping their internet running. We may not even change it by caring lovingly for our children. But the recipients of such labors may find our work significant indeed. For they received medical care, had someone to talk to, got their teeth cleaned, found an old friend on the internet, didn't have to do the dishes, or grew up to be the kind of functioning adult this world so desperately needs because of that loving parental care. These may be small things, but if they are not important, nothing is.

Perhaps then it is the sum total of our labors that make us large. Our labors are not always exciting, but they are necessary to bring about a better future. All those mothers who cared for children and fathers who worked to support them, all those plumbers and doctors and nurses and teachers and firefighters doing their little part in the cosmic dance. All of them recognizing what Victor Frankl taught, that productive work is a constitutive element of a meaningful life.





Addendum - Previous articles about high-tech and work




https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/01/25/irrational-protests-against-google/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2017/11/17/are-google-and-facebook-evil/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2016/10/31/summary-of-how-technology-hijacks-peoples-minds%e2%80%8a-%e2%80%8afrom-a-magician-and-googles-design-ethicist/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/07/24/fulfilling-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2015/03/14/meaning-and-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/05/20/should-you-do-what-you-love/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2016/05/31/the-monotony-of-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2015/10/05/autonomy-mastery-and-purpose-what-we-really-want-from-our-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2015/08/31/rethinking-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/07/25/friendship-is-another-reason-to-work/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2017/04/26/what-is-the-point-of-money/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/02/02/the-overwhelming-problem-of-work-family-conflict-in-the-us/

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/01/22/overworked/