What Jeremy said. As an aside (and a bigger discussion that I'd love some advice on), our recent NSF grant was turned down because we were proposing archiving social content (tweets, comments appended to news articles, blogs, etc.) along with MSM articles (from CNN, BBC News, etc.). The issue was surrounding the ethics of archiving "personal data" even though it is posted in a public space (not password protected, no logon required, etc). We are hoping to meet with folks over at archive.org and the library of congress to discuss this further, but I'd be very interested in hearing how others have dealt with this issue in your grant proposals. Thanks, Liza ______________________________________ Liza Potts, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Writing, Culture, and Technology Co-Director, CeME Lab Old Dominion University Norfolk, VA 23529 AIM: LizaPotts Skype: lkpotts http://ceme.digitalodu.com/ On Fri, May 6, 2011 at 9:54 AM, jeremy hunsinger <jhuns@vt.edu> wrote:
I would not assume anything on facebook is public or publicized other than things you can see on the open internet without login and even then those are copyrighted and as i recall have a license on top of the copyright limiting their public reception, but i could be wrong about the license as i can't find it now. Your ability to use that will be limited by the terms of service of facebook that you agree to (and their api terms are the most flexible). If you need permissions beyond those provided, then i think you need to ask facebook.
what i assume would be public if anything from facebook is anything that you would find preserved in a system like archive.org, the library of congress of the u.s. or the british library.
On May 6, 2011, at 9:44 AM, Adi Kuntsman wrote:
.. so, for example, in case of a 'public' FB group (loging required but noone needs to accept/friend you to be able to see it) - is it public or private and who, if any, should be asked for permission to research and cite?
thanks for advice
--
Dr. Adi Kuntsman Simon Research Fellow Department of Anthropology/ Research Institute for Cosmopolitan Cultures The University of Manchester Second Floor, Arthur Lewis Building, room 2.007 Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK http://adi.kuntsman.googlepages.com From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns@vt.edu> To: aoir list <air-l@aoir.org> Sent: Friday, May 6, 2011 2:32 PM Subject: Re: [Air-L] a question about privacy protection and copyright in Internet research
yes, check login status, i agree. facebook is an odd case because of their terms of service. but if you cannot see something because you are not logged in, then you have questions of privacy much more significantly. most of my research currently deals with things that are a. no login (published blogs) or b. login required but company releases the necessary rights to material that may be openly viewed and anyone can login and openly view(second life). there are other issues in both because both can have private channels and sections, but i don't research those. On May 6, 2011, at 9:16 AM, Radhika Gajjala wrote:
good points
also if you are seeing something because you are a friend or in a circle -that reqd the user to "accept" you - it may be considered pvt
(as in FB)
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