Many of the suggestions I’ve read are...ok, but all of them miss a critical consideration IMO. That is, Twitter screennames are NOT the same as Twitter userids. Screennames can be (and are often) changed, while userid is the actual address to which tweets are delivered. IN some cases, the screennames is an additional Twitter-enabled paratext providing context for the tweet itself! Thus, by anonymizing screennames, you’re glossing the tweet AND the user, placing your interpretation over that of the twitter user. While this may seem like a pedantic difference, it’s of crucial importance for my own work on Black Twitter and Black discursive identity; i find it hard to believe that screenname creativity/invention isn’t important for others studying underrepresented groups on the service. Moreover, the earlier point about attribution is important as well; Black twitter users (among others) are becoming increasingly protective about their perceived ownership of the content they generate online. IF y’all are simply talking ‘bout anonymizing USERID, then i don’t have a problem. While i agree mostly with Theo that Twitter is a public space - and moreover, that the Twitter users i study are agonizingly aware of how public their tweets are - i also exercise judgement when analyzing tweets of a sensitive nature. I have and will continue to ask those Twitter users publishing sensitive content whether i can use their material in my publicly funded, published research with no compensation. In several cases, users have agreed because they feel the subject matter is important, but in many more they have declined. I know that IRB/ethics training is insufficient to determine ‘sensitivity’, but i also have the guidance of many of you excellent academics to rely upon as well. TTFN, A. André Brock Associate Professor of Black Digital Studies Department of Literature, Media, and Communication Georgia Institute of Technology Research Repository: https://umich.academia.edu/AndréBrock E: andre.brock@gmail.com Twitter: @docdre I'd love to connect. Here's my calendar link (https://calendly.com/andre-brock) to make finding time easy.
On Jul 13, 2018 at 12:07 PM, <Air-L-Request (mailto:air-l-request@listserv.aoir.org)> wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Including screennames with tweets (Proferes, Nicholas) 2. Re: For those attending ISA World Congress of Sociology (MC Cambre) 3. Re: Including screennames with tweets (Tarleton L. Gillespie) 4. Re: Including screennames with tweets (Theo Plothe) 5. Re: Including screennames with tweets (Casey Lynn Fiesler)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1 Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 15:17:22 +0000 From: "Proferes, Nicholas" <nproferes@uky.edu> To: Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu>, "daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk" <daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk> Cc: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets Message-ID: <BN7PR03MB346028E9E27D7811093820A5A3580@BN7PR03MB3460.namprd03.prod.outlook.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252"
Hi all,
Casey Fiesler and I recently published an article on Twitter users? perceptions of the use of tweets in research (http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2056305118763366).
One of our findings from the study was that when we asked, "How would you feel if a Tweet of yours was used in a research study and your Tweet was quoted in a published research paper, attributed to your Twitter handle?" only about ~24% of respondents indicated that they would be comfortable with this.
There's obviously a lot of situations in which including Twitter handles is appropriate (quoting public figures seems like a pretty clear cut case), but I do think it might be worth taking user expectations into consideration in that contextual decision, particularly if you are working with populations subject to harassment/bullying.
Cheers,
Nick
________________________________ From: Air-L <air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org> on behalf of Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu> Sent: Friday, July 13, 2018 6:45:06 AM To: daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk Cc: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets
I just recently published a book on Twitter, race, and gender, and my publisher was very insistent I did use people's Twitter handles. For clarification, I used all publicly available tweets. I went back and forth on it myself a few times (and still every once in a while wake up in the middle of the night thinking, "did I do the right thing?!"), but ended up agreeing with them. Their argument, per Twitter's ToS, was that people's tweets should be treated as you would an in-text citation (e.g., "Hayes said"), as they are their thoughts and ideas, expressed in a public forum, and thus they have earned the right to be credited for them (almost on a par with copyright). Because I used public tweets anyone could and can still find the tweets even if I hadn't listed the screen name, which renders the argument that we need to protect their identity somewhat moot. In my book, I discuss some pretty awful statements though, and I did make sure to not choose tweets as examples that could really get people into trouble with their employer, for instance, and would instead use more innocuous tweets to illustrate my point. This kind of research, because I use public tweets, falls outside of our IRB's scope, as they consider it public information on a par with analyzing media content and thus non-human-subjects research. I don't know if this helps at all - I think it's a tough issue to deal with, and both decisions, like you said, have their pros and cons.
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 4:27 AM Daniel Thomas < daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear Becky,
My understanding, though I haven't been involved in Twitter research myself, is that academics in the US have mostly decided it is fine to include screennames and that academics in the UK have mostly decided it is not OK to include screennames. I think that Twitter ToS require the sceennames to be included and allow publication as long as the full tweet is published (including sceenname). However, publishing without the sceenname is not permitted (this is second hand information so I may be wrong). The other issue is that even if sceennames are not included then it is easy to find the author from the content of the tweet and so the authors are still trivially deanonymised. Minor tweaks to punctuation/wording are apparently also insufficient as Twitter's search function will still normally find the original tweet. Depending on the research method you are using it may be possible to write your own synthesised example tweets that are representative of the kind of things people say. However, I know that for some methods/fields that is not possible.
I think it is a question where you will want your Research Ethics Board/IRB to sign off on your answer.
Helena Webb <helena.webb@cs.ox.ac.uk> from the University of Oxford might be a good person to talk to about this because she uses a similar Twitter example in her research ethics case studies at the workshops she runs. She did research that she was not able to publish because she ran into this problem and was not able to find a solution that protected the tweeters and was publishable.
Daniel
On 13/07/18 07:23, Hayes, Rebecca M wrote:
Dear All, Can you please weigh in on the decision to include or not include screennames when we cite tweets in a book? The book is on new media and crime, and we are using tweets in a few places as examples of some different discussions.
We are back and forth on whether we should include the screennames and at others or disclude them. The arguments we have seen thus far, are to include them because it was made public and we are citing someones words. The other argument is to disclude them as the person did not consent to have it printed in that way persay, and the screenname attached in our book could be used to find and harass the person. What are your thoughts?
Thank you, Becky _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Faoir.org&data=02%7C01%7Cnproferes%40uky.edu%7C80b9cf66e88449f8de5008d5e8adbb9d%7C2b30530b69b64457b818481cb53d42ae%7C0%7C0%7C636670755232548876&sdata=HMh%2BFHkdWDwYlDJYLKOqngqLHFdyVdgHBF8JMuO1w5I%3D&reserved=0 Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flistserv.aoir.org%2Flistinfo.cgi%2Fair-l-aoir.org&data=02%7C01%7Cnproferes%40uky.edu%7C80b9cf66e88449f8de5008d5e8adbb9d%7C2b30530b69b64457b818481cb53d42ae%7C0%7C0%7C636670755232548876&sdata=h3LjEtUNDWWctqEjXv4m8jqET0juN0eyXDcHDAX7GJk%3D&reserved=0
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-- Judith E. Rosenbaum, PhD Assistant Professor Department of Communication and Journalism University of Maine 414 Dunn Hall Orono, ME 04469
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------------------------------
Message: 2 Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 11:24:09 -0400 From: MC Cambre <mcambre@ualberta.ca> To: David Due?as Cid <david.duenas@gmail.com> Cc: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] For those attending ISA World Congress of Sociology Message-ID: <CALyQN4oDCMk4aH1Da=pDf9bhxV8O8+FE-CA8vJn68ZX4-CjXFw@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Dear David and others who will be at the ISA,
There is certainly, as you observed a great deal of cross-fertilization between different sociological research areas and the focus on the internet. The internal process, I believe is that you start out as a thematic group, and after time you become a working group, and then meeting certain requirements for numbers (I guess) you apply to become a research committee.
The conference will host over 5000 delegates and the abstract book alone is over 1000 pages, so I tend to stay within Visual Sociology, which often includes a great deal of internet research. Feel free to reach out and connect in Toronto.
Kindly, carolina cambre
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 9:13 AM, David Due?as Cid <david.duenas@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear AOIRs,
I don't know if this is the place where to debate this issue, if not, just tell me and I will find another way of doing so.
Next week will take place the ISA World Congress of Sociology in Toronto, where I plan to take part with, I guess, many other members of this list of distribution.
As it usually happens in big/generalistic conferences, checking the program to find interesting presentations focused on internet and society represents a big effort of patience. Commonly, internet scholars are widely distributed in different Research Comittees, showing the diversity of our researh topics and making difficult the connection between us. An interesting congress schedule, as a result, means a complicated set of overlapped presentations amongst which one needs to blind-decide what to see and what to discard.
There, my debate/question/almost-proposition: *Does anybody feels like trying to discuss something for next ISA conferences in order to gather "Internet Sociology" scholars/contents? *
I am not aware of the internal processes of ISA, I do not know if it is possible to create a new "Reserch Comittee" on this topic, or, even, if it would be convenient. Or if, simply, we could think on different way of organizing the information regarding this topic on ISA Conferences (having some sort of inter-group label to identify the topic). Even that, I think that it might be an interesting debate.
If there is some people interested, maybe we could:
*1) Use this mail as a discussion thread* *2) Find a moment/place to meet in Toronto next week and talk face-to-face about it.*
Best regards,
David Duenas-Cid
_______________________________
*Dr. David Due?as-Cid *Researcher
*Tallinn University of Technology*
*Ragnar Nurkse Department of Innovation and Governance *Akadeemia tee 3
EE-12618 Tallinn _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/ listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- --
*Dr. Carolina Cambre PhD Assistant Professor Concordia University, Montr?alhttps://concordia.academia.edu/mariacarolinacambre <https://concordia.academia.edu/mariacarolinacambre>https://www.concordia.ca/artsci/education/faculty.html?fpid=carolina-cambre <https://www.concordia.ca/artsci/education/faculty.html?fpid=carolina-cambre>* <http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-semiotics-of-che-guevara-9781472505293/>
------------------------------
Message: 3 Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 15:27:12 +0000 From: "Tarleton L. Gillespie" <tlg28@cornell.edu> To: "Proferes, Nicholas" <nproferes@uky.edu>, Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu>, "daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk" <daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk> Cc: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets Message-ID: <65C8A412-3302-4E8C-9711-24F963C34B91@cornell.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Out of curiosity, I scanned through Twitter's ToS and related policies; I didn't see anything indicating how they want a tweet to be cited. Maybe it did in earlier versions, or I just missed it. But even so, it's not clear how Twitter's ToS has any standing or relevance to what a researcher does, as they're not the person contracting with Twitter in that contract. We could take their advice in to account, but I think Nick and Casey's point is the right one. What's the added value to the research of including the person's Twitter handle in the publication, such that it overcomes the possible discomfort and possible harm it could bring? It's surprising to me how often adding the handle / the name of the speaker / the interviewee really doesn't add to the analysis -- that we may be doing it more because it's what journalists do, or because we want to perform that it?s a legit tweet, or out of habit. Our instinct should not be how much can I publish based on what rights I think people ha ve given up, but how far can I go to protect people and still make the cogent analysis the discussion requires.
Tarleton
?On 7/13/18, 11:17 AM, "Air-L on behalf of Proferes, Nicholas" <air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org on behalf of nproferes@uky.edu> wrote:
Hi all,
Casey Fiesler and I recently published an article on Twitter users? perceptions of the use of tweets in research (http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2056305118763366).
One of our findings from the study was that when we asked, "How would you feel if a Tweet of yours was used in a research study and your Tweet was quoted in a published research paper, attributed to your Twitter handle?" only about ~24% of respondents indicated that they would be comfortable with this.
There's obviously a lot of situations in which including Twitter handles is appropriate (quoting public figures seems like a pretty clear cut case), but I do think it might be worth taking user expectations into consideration in that contextual decision, particularly if you are working with populations subject to harassment/bullying.
Cheers,
Nick
________________________________ From: Air-L <air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org> on behalf of Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu> Sent: Friday, July 13, 2018 6:45:06 AM To: daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk Cc: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets
I just recently published a book on Twitter, race, and gender, and my publisher was very insistent I did use people's Twitter handles. For clarification, I used all publicly available tweets. I went back and forth on it myself a few times (and still every once in a while wake up in the middle of the night thinking, "did I do the right thing?!"), but ended up agreeing with them. Their argument, per Twitter's ToS, was that people's tweets should be treated as you would an in-text citation (e.g., "Hayes said"), as they are their thoughts and ideas, expressed in a public forum, and thus they have earned the right to be credited for them (almost on a par with copyright). Because I used public tweets anyone could and can still find the tweets even if I hadn't listed the screen name, which renders the argument that we need to protect their identity somewhat moot. In my book, I discuss some pretty awful statements though, and I did make sure to not choose tweets as examples that could really get people into trouble with their employer, for instance, and would instead use more innocuous tweets to illustrate my point. This kind of research, because I use public tweets, falls outside of our IRB's scope, as they consider it public information on a par with analyzing media content and thus non-human-subjects research. I don't know if this helps at all - I think it's a tough issue to deal with, and both decisions, like you said, have their pros and cons.
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 4:27 AM Daniel Thomas < daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear Becky,
My understanding, though I haven't been involved in Twitter research myself, is that academics in the US have mostly decided it is fine to include screennames and that academics in the UK have mostly decided it is not OK to include screennames. I think that Twitter ToS require the sceennames to be included and allow publication as long as the full tweet is published (including sceenname). However, publishing without the sceenname is not permitted (this is second hand information so I may be wrong). The other issue is that even if sceennames are not included then it is easy to find the author from the content of the tweet and so the authors are still trivially deanonymised. Minor tweaks to punctuation/wording are apparently also insufficient as Twitter's search function will still normally find the original tweet. Depending on the research method you are using it may be possible to write your own synthesised example tweets that are representative of the kind of things people say. However, I know that for some methods/fields that is not possible.
I think it is a question where you will want your Research Ethics Board/IRB to sign off on your answer.
Helena Webb <helena.webb@cs.ox.ac.uk> from the University of Oxford might be a good person to talk to about this because she uses a similar Twitter example in her research ethics case studies at the workshops she runs. She did research that she was not able to publish because she ran into this problem and was not able to find a solution that protected the tweeters and was publishable.
Daniel
On 13/07/18 07:23, Hayes, Rebecca M wrote:
Dear All, Can you please weigh in on the decision to include or not include screennames when we cite tweets in a book? The book is on new media and crime, and we are using tweets in a few places as examples of some different discussions.
We are back and forth on whether we should include the screennames and at others or disclude them. The arguments we have seen thus far, are to include them because it was made public and we are citing someones words. The other argument is to disclude them as the person did not consent to have it printed in that way persay, and the screenname attached in our book could be used to find and harass the person. What are your thoughts?
Thank you, Becky _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Faoir.org&data=02%7C01%7Cnproferes%40uky.edu%7C80b9cf66e88449f8de5008d5e8adbb9d%7C2b30530b69b64457b818481cb53d42ae%7C0%7C0%7C636670755232548876&sdata=HMh%2BFHkdWDwYlDJYLKOqngqLHFdyVdgHBF8JMuO1w5I%3D&reserved=0 Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flistserv.aoir.org%2Flistinfo.cgi%2Fair-l-aoir.org&data=02%7C01%7Cnproferes%40uky.edu%7C80b9cf66e88449f8de5008d5e8adbb9d%7C2b30530b69b64457b818481cb53d42ae%7C0%7C0%7C636670755232548876&sdata=h3LjEtUNDWWctqEjXv4m8jqET0juN0eyXDcHDAX7GJk%3D&reserved=0
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Message: 4 Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 10:41:45 -0500 From: Theo Plothe <tp6316a@student.american.edu> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets Message-ID: <CAOzAoFF31=XZ_s7zEMgAPNYuhAnikmwkAHrLqFVEMv=XA8-XsQ@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Twitter is a public forum in the public sphere. There is no expectation of anonymity on speech in that regard. Having published a few pieces on Twitter including a book chapter just a few weeks ago, I have never failed to publish the screennames on the se accounts. The only reason not to include tweets is if the tweets are from a protected account, which is of course is not part of the public timeline.
Best, Theo
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Message: 5 Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 16:07:54 +0000 From: Casey Lynn Fiesler <Casey.Fiesler@Colorado.EDU> To: "Tarleton L. Gillespie" <tlg28@cornell.edu> Cc: "Proferes, Nicholas" <nproferes@uky.edu>, Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu>, "daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk" <daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk>, "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets Message-ID: <628BDFC1-7A7E-4051-BAB7-0176F161C595@colorado.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Nick already mentioned out recent research about this, but I?ll just chime in and add a few thoughts:
It hasn?t come up at all what the subject matter of the papers/books are. I think that this is really relevant to an ethical analysis of this situation, because it goes to potential harm. There?s a big difference between ?here is a tweet from someone talking about what they had for breakfast? and ?here is a tweet from someone showing signs of a mental illness? or ?here is a tweet from a political dissident who might be in physical danger?. Whether or not online content is PUBLIC is an important contextual factor (because of course if it?s not public, that?s a problem), but in my opinion should not be the only thing relevant for this decision.
Though it?s also worth pointing out that if the tweet is something that could actually lead to harm, the issue isn?t publishing the handle or not - because public tweets can be easily searched. In that case, it might be better not to quote a tweet verbatim, or to use composites.
As Tarleton says, the issue is whether a certain use is required to describe the work, which goes to a cost/benefit analysis. If it?s a tweet about breakfast that should be a different analysis than a tweet about a health condition. For the latter, you might want a more compelling reason for why the tweet needs to be there.
The account name issue is even more tricky because depending on the context, it is possible there could be harm by not giving someone CREDIT for their content. But unless that kind of thing is likely - given what Nick and I found, unless there?s a reason that a handle has explanatory value it seems to just add another layer of potential discomfort for the unknowing research participants.
That said, there are different norms in different communities about this kind of thing. What I?d like most to see is ethical analyses beyond ?is it public or not? and for those analyses to be surfaced in the writing. So regardless of decisions, explaining them as part of methods would be great!
Casey
On Jul 13, 2018, at 9:27 AM, Tarleton L. Gillespie <tlg28@cornell.edu> wrote:
Out of curiosity, I scanned through Twitter's ToS and related policies; I didn't see anything indicating how they want a tweet to be cited. Maybe it did in earlier versions, or I just missed it. But even so, it's not clear how Twitter's ToS has any standing or relevance to what a researcher does, as they're not the person contracting with Twitter in that contract. We could take their advice in to account, but I think Nick and Casey's point is the right one. What's the added value to the research of including the person's Twitter handle in the publication, such that it overcomes the possible discomfort and possible harm it could bring? It's surprising to me how often adding the handle / the name of the speaker / the interviewee really doesn't add to the analysis -- that we may be doing it more because it's what journalists do, or because we want to perform that it?s a legit tweet, or out of habit. Our instinct should not be how much can I publish based on what rights I think people have given up, but how far can I go to protect people and still make the cogent analysis the discussion requires.
Tarleton
?On 7/13/18, 11:17 AM, "Air-L on behalf of Proferes, Nicholas" <air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org on behalf of nproferes@uky.edu> wrote:
Hi all,
Casey Fiesler and I recently published an article on Twitter users? perceptions of the use of tweets in research (http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2056305118763366).
One of our findings from the study was that when we asked, "How would you feel if a Tweet of yours was used in a research study and your Tweet was quoted in a published research paper, attributed to your Twitter handle?" only about ~24% of respondents indicated that they would be comfortable with this.
There's obviously a lot of situations in which including Twitter handles is appropriate (quoting public figures seems like a pretty clear cut case), but I do think it might be worth taking user expectations into consideration in that contextual decision, particularly if you are working with populations subject to harassment/bullying.
Cheers,
Nick
________________________________ From: Air-L <air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org> on behalf of Judith Rosenbaum-Andre <judith.rosenbaumandre@maine.edu> Sent: Friday, July 13, 2018 6:45:06 AM To: daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk Cc: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] Including screennames with tweets
I just recently published a book on Twitter, race, and gender, and my publisher was very insistent I did use people's Twitter handles. For clarification, I used all publicly available tweets. I went back and forth on it myself a few times (and still every once in a while wake up in the middle of the night thinking, "did I do the right thing?!"), but ended up agreeing with them. Their argument, per Twitter's ToS, was that people's tweets should be treated as you would an in-text citation (e.g., "Hayes said"), as they are their thoughts and ideas, expressed in a public forum, and thus they have earned the right to be credited for them (almost on a par with copyright). Because I used public tweets anyone could and can still find the tweets even if I hadn't listed the screen name, which renders the argument that we need to protect their identity somewhat moot. In my book, I discuss some pretty awful statements though, and I did make sure to not choose tweets as examples that could really get people into trouble with their employer, for instance, and would instead use more innocuous tweets to illustrate my point. This kind of research, because I use public tweets, falls outside of our IRB's scope, as they consider it public information on a par with analyzing media content and thus non-human-subjects research. I don't know if this helps at all - I think it's a tough issue to deal with, and both decisions, like you said, have their pros and cons.
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 4:27 AM Daniel Thomas < daniel.thomas--airl@cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear Becky,
My understanding, though I haven't been involved in Twitter research myself, is that academics in the US have mostly decided it is fine to include screennames and that academics in the UK have mostly decided it is not OK to include screennames. I think that Twitter ToS require the sceennames to be included and allow publication as long as the full tweet is published (including sceenname). However, publishing without the sceenname is not permitted (this is second hand information so I may be wrong). The other issue is that even if sceennames are not included then it is easy to find the author from the content of the tweet and so the authors are still trivially deanonymised. Minor tweaks to punctuation/wording are apparently also insufficient as Twitter's search function will still normally find the original tweet. Depending on the research method you are using it may be possible to write your own synthesised example tweets that are representative of the kind of things people say. However, I know that for some methods/fields that is not possible.
I think it is a question where you will want your Research Ethics Board/IRB to sign off on your answer.
Helena Webb <helena.webb@cs.ox.ac.uk> from the University of Oxford might be a good person to talk to about this because she uses a similar Twitter example in her research ethics case studies at the workshops she runs. She did research that she was not able to publish because she ran into this problem and was not able to find a solution that protected the tweeters and was publishable.
Daniel
On 13/07/18 07:23, Hayes, Rebecca M wrote:
Dear All, Can you please weigh in on the decision to include or not include screennames when we cite tweets in a book? The book is on new media and crime, and we are using tweets in a few places as examples of some different discussions.
We are back and forth on whether we should include the screennames and at others or disclude them. The arguments we have seen thus far, are to include them because it was made public and we are citing someones words. The other argument is to disclude them as the person did not consent to have it printed in that way persay, and the screenname attached in our book could be used to find and harass the person. What are your thoughts?
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