Really?
Then define it.
Easy. Consicousness is a skill or ability similar to walking or playing the piano. It isn't a "thing", it isn't a property, it isn't a process, and it certainly doesn't exist separate from a being that can learn that skill or display the usage of it any more than piano playing can exist without a pianist. Technically, consciousness as most people use the term is two skills: the ability to distinguish between "me" and "not me", and the ability to recognize that ability in others. The reason consciousness becomes such a bone of contention in philosophy is that it is directly tied in with morality.
The ability to recognize consciousness in others can only be based on what Mercution calls public behavior. If an object does not display the public behavior I have learned to associate with consciousness, I consider it to be not conscious. So for example, a rock does not display the ability to recognize between itself and others, so I consider it to be not conscious. My dog does display this behavior, so I consider it to be conscious. A sleeping person doesn't display the ability to distinguish between "me" and "not me" at that moment, so he or she is temporarily not conscious.
Because of this, I consider a rock to be not conscious and therefore actions taken with or against a rock are amoral (without moral consequences). I consider my dog to be conscious that therefore actions taken with or against my dog can be moral or immoral, but not amoral. With this in mind, it is fine to pound a tent stake in with a rock, but not to do so with my dog.
Like most skills, this has to be learned and some people/animals/things do not seem to be able to learn it as well as others. This is why you may see the occasional psychopath (or two year old

) trying to pound tent stakes in with the family dog.
Computer programs tend to fall in a gray area with some people recognizing the computer's ability to distinguish between "me" and "not me" and others failing to do so. I believe this has to do with people having varying levels of skill, maybe in a few cases having too much talent for recognizing that ability in others, such as those who subscribe to the "everything is conscious" belief.