[Air-L] Best Practices for Conducting Risky Research & Protecting Yourself from Online Harassment

Alex Leavitt alexleavitt at gmail.com
Tue Oct 18 09:21:08 PDT 2016


This is awesome!!


---

Alexander Leavitt, Ph.D.
Quantitative UX Researcher, Facebook Research
http://alexleavitt.com
Twitter: @alexleavitt <http://twitter.com/alexleavitt>


On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 7:49 AM, Alice E. Marwick <amarwick at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Dear all,
>
> I'm delighted to announce that Lindsay Blackwell, Katherine Lo and I have
> finished a guide for researchers who wish to investigate topics that may
> leave them open to online harassment or other networked forms of abuse.
>
> http://datasociety.net/output/best-practices-for-conducting-
> risky-research/
>
> We've put together recommendations for institutions, supervisors, and
> researchers-- especially junior researchers. This is academic-focused, but
> we've included lots of cybersecurity guidelines and links to other
> resources.
>
> Please let us know if you find this helpful, and send any suggestions to
> riskyresearch at datasociety.net.
>
> Best
> Alice
>
> --
> Alice E. Marwick, PhD
> Fellow, Data & Society
> Assistant Professor, Department of Communication
> University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (as of 2017)
> amarwick at gmail.com
> http://www.tiara.org  <http://www.tiara.org>
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