Most technology has dual uses - who knew?
I'm betting they aren't "taking funding to help develop missiles for china" they're doing tidbits of research in the public domain.
“These collaborations support research into fundamental technologies which could help develop lighter, safer and more efficient commercial aircraft worldwide. We are open about this work and conduct no classified research. All of the centres’ scientific outputs are in the public domain and are routinely published in leading international journals.
“Prior to formalising these collaborations, Imperial conducted its own due diligence. We worked with and received support from the Export Control Organisation (ECO), and we continue to work closely with the UK government. All relationships with third parties are subject to prior and continued review.”
Doesn't seem like a big deal. Probably its gone too far, but academia sold its ethical soul long ago on the the instructions of government.
How ethical is it to charge students a fortune and sell them debt for a useless degree which costs nothing to deliver?
We probably shouldn't be engaging with China at any level, but we have no manufacturing base - thanks to the Steve Jobs of the world - any more so we have no choice.
I should think Apple has done more than any other organisation to enable the Chinese military to destroy us - its very likely the same factory which makes the chips for your next Macbook makes the chips which will guide the hypersonic missiles onto us. Certainly the nanometre technology will have been transferred across instead of being kept secret in America.
engineers in a company who act unscrupulously or in the interests of profits
I can't think of an actual provable example and nor can you. These are typically not engineering decisions, they're commercial ones.
Picking an example closer to home:
If your manager instructed you to publish a trash novel to be sold in airports and likely left on a beach or disposed of after a few weeks, absolutely had to be out in two weeks to meet summer holiday sales, paperback and paper which turns yellow after six months will be fine, but instead you spent six months editing and re-editing to perfect the prose and cultural and historical references Tom Clancy didn't get quite right, instructed the printers to supply a hardback with museum quality parchment "because planned obsolescence and profits over quality are bad mmkay" people would ask what was wrong with your head around the time your company went bust.
If you did publish a crap paperback with a spine which wrinkles as soon as you open it and paper which turns yellow after six months could you rightfully be criticised for being unethical, publishing books which don't last a century or enlighten the next generation and fill up landfill dumps?
The market gets exactly what the market wants, blame the consumer for their choices and unscrupulous executives for delivering to them.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2019-11-25 18:41:01)