6.1 Lesson Overview
This lesson introduces learners to the ethical use of digital information in online and workplace environments. Learners will explore responsible information usage, copyright awareness, plagiarism, privacy protection, and ethical digital behaviour when accessing, sharing, and using online content.
The lesson also explains how ethical digital practices support professionalism, legal compliance, and responsible participation in digital environments.
6.2 Lesson Outcomes
After completing this lesson, learners will be able to:
- Define ethical use of digital information.
- Explain the importance of copyright and intellectual property.
- Identify examples of plagiarism and unethical digital behaviour.
- Apply responsible information sharing practices.
- Respect privacy and confidentiality requirements.
- Use online information responsibly and legally.
- Apply ethical digital practices in workplace environments.
6.3 What is Ethical Use of Digital Information?
Ethical use of digital information means using online content, digital resources, and electronic information:
- responsibly,
- legally,
- honestly,
- and respectfully.
Ethical digital practices help protect:
- creators,
- users,
- organisations,
- and online communities.
6.4 Copyright and Intellectual Property
Copyright protects the work created by individuals and organisations.
Digital content protected by copyright may include:
- documents,
- images,
- videos,
- music,
- software,
- and online publications.
Users should:
- respect copyright laws,
- avoid illegal copying,
- and acknowledge original creators where necessary.
Intellectual Property
Intellectual property refers to creations such as:
- ideas,
- designs,
- written content,
- inventions,
- and digital media.
Intellectual property rights help protect creators and organisations.
6.5 What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work or ideas as your own without proper acknowledgment.
Examples of Plagiarism
| Example | Description |
|---|---|
| Copying text without credit | Using another person’s work dishonestly |
| Downloading illegal content | Using copyrighted material unlawfully |
| Sharing copyrighted files illegally | Violating intellectual property rights |
Plagiarism is unethical and may have academic or legal consequences.
6.6 Responsible Information Sharing
Users should share digital information responsibly.
Responsible Information Practices
- Verify information before sharing
- Respect privacy and confidentiality
- Use information legally
- Avoid spreading misinformation
- Credit original sources where necessary
Responsible information sharing improves trust and professionalism.
6.7 Privacy and Confidentiality
Digital users should protect confidential and private information.
Confidential information may include:
- personal records,
- passwords,
- financial information,
- workplace documents,
- and customer information.
Users should:
- follow workplace privacy policies,
- protect sensitive information,
- and avoid unauthorized sharing.
6.8 Ethical Digital Behaviour in Workplaces
Workplaces require employees to:
- use digital information responsibly,
- follow legal and ethical guidelines,
- respect intellectual property,
- and maintain confidentiality.
Professional digital behaviour supports:
- trust,
- workplace integrity,
- and responsible communication.
6.9 Importance of Ethical Digital Practices
Ethical use of digital information is important because it:
- protects intellectual property,
- supports legal compliance,
- improves professionalism,
- and promotes responsible digital participation.
Ethical digital practices help maintain safe and trustworthy digital environments.
6.10 Key Notes / Summary
- Ethical use of digital information involves responsible and legal digital behaviour.
- Copyright protects digital content and intellectual property.
- Plagiarism involves using another person’s work dishonestly.
- Responsible information sharing improves trust and professionalism.
- Privacy and confidentiality should be protected carefully.
- Workplaces require ethical digital behaviour and responsible communication.
- Ethical practices support professionalism and legal compliance.