[Air-L] Fwd: [dmlhub-l] 2nd Annual Symposium on Digital Ethics

Alexander Halavais halavais at gmail.com
Fri Aug 31 23:12:00 PDT 2012


Looks to be a day that would of interest to many AIR folks.

- A


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Donald Heider <dheider at luc.edu>
Date: Fri, Aug 31, 2012 at 11:42 AM
Subject: [dmlhub-l] 2nd Annual Symposium on Digital Ethics
To: dmlhub-l at uci.edu


Please join us October 29th in Chicago for the 2nd Annual Symposium on
Digital Ethics.

You can register for the symposium here:
http://digitalethics.org/events/international-symposium-digital-ethics/

The schedule for the symposium is below:


2nd Annual Symposium on Digital Ethics
Tentative Schedule

8 – 8:30 registration and breakfast

8:45 Welcome

9:00 – 10:15  Research concerns and digital ethics;  featured panel
discussion.

Moderator: Annette Markham, Guest Professor, Umeå University, Sweden,
Affiliate Professor, School of Communication, Loyola University,
Chicago.

Contextual Integrity Confronts New Models of Education and Healthcare -
Helen Nissenbaum, Professor of Media, Culture and Communication, and
Computer Science, at New York University

Big Real Problems: Emerging Ethics Issues in Human Experimentation in
Virtual Worlds - Joshua Fairfield, Associate Professor of Law,
Washington and Lee University

Identity, Authority and Unease: Examining the articulation of ethical
positions in accounts of new media use/research - Natasha Whiteman,
Lecturer, Department of Media and Communications, University of
Leicester

The Ethics of Twitter Research: A Topology of Disciplines, Methods and
Ethics Review Boards - Michael Zimmer & Nicholas Proferes, University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee


10: 30 – 11:45

Panel: Trust, ethics and moral agency.

Moderator: Bastiaan Vanacker, Loyola Chicago

Degrees of Trust and Levels of Moral Agency in the Context of
Autonomous Machines, Herman Tavani, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy,
Rivier University

Virtue Ethics and Digital ‘Flourishing’: An Application of Philippa
Foot to Life Online - Patrick Lee Plaisance, Colorado State University

Online security and individuals rights, an ethical balance -
Mariaroarosaria Taddeo, University of Hertfordshire

The Junk File Case: Identity collisions and the ethics of connectivity
- Guillaume Latzko-Toth, Université Laval


Panel: Social media, law & ethics.

Moderator:  Don Heider

Control, Communication, and Conflict on Facebook Memorial Pages -
Nicole B. Ellison, Associate Professor in the Telecommunication,
Information Studies, and Media Department at Michigan State University
and Alice Marwick, Microsoft Research

Click here to comment: Combining ethical and legal perspectives on
Section 230 - Susan Keith, Rutgers University

Should virtual cybercrime be brought under the scope of the criminal
law? - Litska Strikwerda, , University of Twente

Journalists and Social Media: Professional Restrictions and Their
Ethical Implications - Erica Bailey, Virginia Tech


11:45 Lunch

12:15 Keynote – Sherry Turkle, Abby Rockefeller Mauzé Professor of the
Social Studies of Science and Technology in the Program in Science,
Technology, and Society at MIT and the founder and current director of
the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self (
http://web.mit.edu/sturkle/techself )

1:30 – 2:45

Panel:  Digital ethics and the fourth estate.

Moderator: Don Wycliff, Loyola Chicago

Re-Inventing Media Ethics Amid a Digital Revolution - Stephen J. A.
Ward, Burgess Professor of Journalism Ethics, University of Wisconsin

The Emerging Uses of Ethical Principles in Journalist’s Privilege Law –
Jason M. Shepard, California State University, Fullerton

The Ethics of Unpublication - Jasmine McNealy, Syracuse University &
Laurence Alexander, University of Florida.

The Ethical Implications of an Elite Press - Jane B. Singer, University
of Iowa

Panel: Global perspectives in digital ethics.

Moderator: Lauren Labrecque, Loyola Chicago

The Internet and Authoritarian States: Ethical Issues in Transnational
Digital Activism - Cameran Ashraf, University of California, Los
Angeles

“Yes, Vinton, there is a Human Right to the Internet” - Kay Mathiesen,
University of Arizona

A Case Study of Censor Circumvention in Chinese Micro-blogging Site -
Yiran Wang, University
of California, Irvine

Secrets and Lies: Digital Media Ethics and Integrity in Global
Perspective - Twyla Gibson, Harvard University



3:00 – 4:15

Panel:  Surveillance and privacy

Moderator: Steven Jones, Loyola Chicago

YouTube Shakespeares: Ethical Issues in Humanities and Literary
Research Contexts - Valerie Fazel, Arizona State University

Digital ethics and the Pascua Yaqui Tribe: When moral rights about
culture trump legal rights about digital image gathering –Kevin R.
Kemper, University of Arizona

>From Battlefield to Newsroom: Ethical and Legal Implications of Drone
Technology in Journalism - Kathleen Bartzen Culver, University of
Wisconsin-Madison

In Context: Ethical Implications of Digital Surveillance – Jan
Fernback, Temple University

Panel:  Balancing interests in digital technology.

Monderator: Meghan Dougherty, Loyola Chicago

The Curator’s Code: Toward an Ethics of Curation? - Shawn McIntosh,
Columbia University

The Ethics of Online Coursework: Instructor Responsibilities, Student
Participation, and Managing Public-Private Learning- Vanessa P. Dennen,
Florida State University

Reading Privacy: The Role Interface Aesthetics Play in eReader Privacy
Disclosure Decisions - J. Richard Stevens, University of Colorado at
Boulder

Plug away: disclosure of material connections in social media channels
- David Kamerer, Loyola University Chicago

4:15 – 5:30

The ethics of games and virtual worlds; featured panel discussion.

Moderator: J. Talmadge Wright ,Loyola Chicago

Playing with ethics: Digital games and moral dilemmas"
Mia Consalvo, Canada Research Chair in Game Studies & Design, Concordia
University

The Virtual Other: Thinking about virtuality and the future of ethics -
Lucas D. Introna, Professor & Associate Dean for Research, Centre (
http://www.lums.lancs.ac.uk/research/centres/csto/ ) for the Study of
Technology & Organisation, Lancaster University

Beyond good and evil? Analyzing moral decision-making in mainstream
video games - Thorsten Busch, University of St. Gallen

Biases on Truthfulness:  Using a Game to Prompt Self-Reflection - Ralph
Vacca, New York University

5:30 – 6:30 Cocktails

Don Heider
Dean, School of Communication
Loyola University Chicago
820 N, Michigan Ave.
Chicago, IL  60611
312-915-6558

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