1 / 9

Genres and Generations of Internet Research Ethics

Genres and Generations of Internet Research Ethics. Maria Bakardjieva University of Calgary. The Dawn of Research Ethics. Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 98(2), 1969 Two models of research ethics: The fiduciary or law-model.

ryo
Télécharger la présentation

Genres and Generations of Internet Research Ethics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genres and Generations of Internet Research Ethics Maria Bakardjieva University of Calgary

  2. The Dawn of Research Ethics Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 98(2), 1969 • Two models of research ethics: • The fiduciary or law-model. • The sociological or collaborative model. • The relationship between researcher and subject is a central dimension.

  3. Early Debates on Internet Research Ethics The Information Society, 12, 1996 • The technological point of view: some places are simply public by their empirical nature. • Online forums public or private? • Perceived privacy (King). • Situated, dialogic agreements that develop over time between researcher and participants (Allen)

  4. Main Stakeholders in Research Ethics • The researcher. • The subject/participant. • The research/knowledge community. • The university. • Regulatory bodies. • Publishers. • Society at large.

  5. The Subject Online Peculiarities of the ‘virtual’ subject, specific risks and harms: • Individual – identifiable person; • Individual – online personality, pseudonym, avatar; • Online group/community as a whole. • New players: owners of sites, forums.

  6. Evolving Concepts • Privacy in public (Nissenbaum) • Contextual integrity (Nissenbaum) • Harvesting (Scherf) • Non-alienation (Bakardjieva & Feenberg) • Expressive privacy (DeCew; Goldie) • Participants’ interests (Bakardjieva and Feenberg) • Dialogic affordances (Allen; Bakardjieva & Feenberg)

  7. Generational Changes • Growing awareness of Internet users, ‘street-smartness’; • Growing skills of users in protecting their expressive privacy; • Interaction between users and research/researchers; research on researchers; • Local regulation: articulation of site/forum policies; • Accumulation of experience in the academic community; • Development of original techniques for soliciting and obtaining consent & for subject participation in research. • More proprietary issues to emerge as users take on the medium as authors. • Movement to Creative Commons licensing?

  8. Researching the Researchers: Example If you look at the links you will find the professor is into a study of group dynamics, with one objective to develop software to make the newsgroup experience more user friendly. As one of the main sources of humour and dynamics you would be a sad loss. Janis's original post had my paranoia going. Too much effusive flattery gets my defences into gear. It seemed to me that they could have got all of the information needed from the archives without telling anybody, though that would be using the data for a purpose other than it was collected for. I do not know how American law treats this.If the data was to be genuinely untraceable to source we would have no way of knowing. Most researchers are aware that knowledge of being surveyed, and of the purposes of that surveillance, changes the behaviour of the surveyed. I wondered if telling us was a ploy to see our reaction. Having researched the professors background. it appears he is genuine on his motivation, and the exercise might have benefits, perhaps major ones, for the future. No BS, I think you would be a significant loss.

  9. Researching the Researchers: Example (cont.) The professor is leading the study. His co-workers include Dr. Maria Bakardjieva, some quotes from her: “Born in a south-eastern corner of Europe. Battling for ground in western North America. Raised under communism. Converted to cosmopolitanism. Likes to talk with people. Likes to theorize. Loves a good laugh. Tries to be profound. Tries to be productive. Tries to be popular. But seriously,...” and: “In light of this formulation of the meaning of virtual togetherness, I question the dichotomies between the private and the public, on one hand, and virtual and real community, on the other, that are at the roots of both virtual utopia and dystopia.” I get good vibes here too.

More Related