The Ethics of Cybersecurity: Balancing Security and Privacy in the Digital Age (Published)
The digital transformation has dramatically reshaped the cybersecurity landscape, creating unprecedented challenges at the intersection of security imperatives and privacy rights. The expanding threat surface, evidenced by billions of exposed records and pervasive breaches across sectors, has intensified pressure on organizations to implement robust security measures that frequently conflict with privacy expectations. This tension manifests across multiple dimensions: theoretical frameworks that position security and privacy as competing rather than complementary values; mass data collection practices that extend beyond legitimate security needs; artificial intelligence deployments that introduce opacity and bias into security operations; and vulnerability disclosure processes that navigate complex ethical terrain. The traditional zero-sum conceptualization of security and privacy proves increasingly inadequate as empirical evidence demonstrates how privacy-neglecting security measures often undermine their own objectives through user resistance and workarounds. Emerging approaches including contextual integrity frameworks, proportionality principles, privacy-enhancing technologies, and explainable security models offer pathways to reconcile these seemingly opposing values. By rejecting false dichotomies and embracing nuanced ethical frameworks that honor both security imperatives and fundamental rights, organizations can develop more effective and sustainable approaches to cybersecurity governance in the digital age.
Keywords: Cybersecurity ethics, algorithmic bias, privacy-security tension, proportionality principle, surveillance impact, vulnerability disclosure