[Air-L] Air-L Digest, Vol 82, Issue 12

Gwen Shaffer glshaffe at uci.edu
Fri May 13 16:32:18 PDT 2011


okay, one more post.

Gwen Shaffer, PhD
Post-doctoral fellow
Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences
University of California, Irvine
267.475.1441


On 5/9/2011 3:00 PM, air-l-request at listserv.aoir.org wrote:
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> Today's Topics:
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>     1. Re: a question about privacy protection and copyright in
>        Internet research (Michael Zimmer)
>     2. Re: a question about privacy protection and copyright in
>        Internet research (stu at texifter.com)
>     3. Virtual Immersive and Cyber Technologies ? First Summer
>        School (Grainne Kirwan)
>     4. CFP: iConference 2012 | Culture * Design * Society (Sara Grimes)
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> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 6 May 2011 14:29:43 -0500
> From: Michael Zimmer<zimmerm at uwm.edu>
> To: jeremy hunsinger<jhuns at vt.edu>
> Cc: aoir list<air-l at aoir.org>
> Subject: Re: [Air-L] a question about privacy protection and copyright
> 	in	Internet research
> Message-ID:<256411AA-3C97-4F69-BEFE-84673C4A3E71 at uwm.edu>
> Content-Type: text/plain;	charset=us-ascii
>
> There's much to chew on with Jeremy's thoughtful reply below (and this entire thread), but I want bring to light one possible complication:
>
> "My position is that there is a public and publishing makes things public, and there is a private, and if you don't want it public, you shouldn't publish it. I don't want the private to bleed into the public, nor the public to bleed into the private, but I see the line as very clear and I want it to be made very clear"
>
> You may see the line as clear -- at the moment -- but the line often moves. Consider how certain profile information I shared on Facebook in 2008 was restricted to only my friends. I created a "private" sphere, borrowing your framework.
>
> Then, in 2010, Facebook changed the platform, and this information was automatically now made public. I had no choice, little warning, and little ability to react or remove this information. (Perhaps I'm not very aware of such things; perhaps I haven't logged in for months; perhaps I'm just not too bright).
>
> Now, in 2011, a researcher uses Google and discovers this information from my Facebook profile that is now publicly available.
>
> Was this information "published"? Is it really meant to be "public"? Did I consent to it being used?  Is my ignorance about how Facebook now works justification for harvesting and using the information?
>
> -michael.
>
>



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