They're so ineffective that they might as well not exist.
The only rules I've seen applied to lawyers with any regularity are those governing decorum (eg, don't be an ass in court) or client obligations (ie, don't be a shitty contractor) or those that are also criminal (eg, if you commit fraud, we'll yank your license too). Technology could do better there.
But to call out government surveillance or cyber warfare, which are both overseen by legal departments that work diligently to inventively authorize the acticity? Or dark patterns and data collection, where lawyers go through contortions to authorize it in "agreements"?
I would say all four of your chosen examples are more failings of lawyers than engineers. (Though both bear some responsibility.)
It just seems strange to suggest professional rules for engineers would've stopped something that clearly professional rules for lawyers did not.
The only rules I've seen applied to lawyers with any regularity are those governing decorum (eg, don't be an ass in court) or client obligations (ie, don't be a shitty contractor) or those that are also criminal (eg, if you commit fraud, we'll yank your license too). Technology could do better there.
But to call out government surveillance or cyber warfare, which are both overseen by legal departments that work diligently to inventively authorize the acticity? Or dark patterns and data collection, where lawyers go through contortions to authorize it in "agreements"?
I would say all four of your chosen examples are more failings of lawyers than engineers. (Though both bear some responsibility.)
It just seems strange to suggest professional rules for engineers would've stopped something that clearly professional rules for lawyers did not.