Platform Data Access Report
Dear colleagues, Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report <https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Media-Observatorys-Working-Group-on-Platform-to-Researcher-Data-Access-2022.pdf> . The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year. Our main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code. Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.) Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context. Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc. Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu
Dear colleagues, as a quick follow up - first of all, a tremendous shout out to Rebekah for her work as chair of this project. Bringing together representatives from major platforms, experts in GDPR and related law, NGOs, practicing researchers (and even an ethicist) into sharp and focused dialogue over the year+ leading up to this publication, coupled with the agreements over various aspects and elements of the Code of Conduct, was an all but superhuman task. As someone privileged to participate under Chatham House Rules, I am allowed to say that there was universal and enthusiastic consensus affirming Rebekah's extraordinary work in getting us to this place - a place that one at the outset could reasonably doubt we would ever see. Secondly: the draft Code endorses the AoIR ethics guidelines 3.0 as follows: The research should follow the Ethical Guidelines for Internet Research of the Association of Internet Researchers (as well as any other specialized or sector-based guidelines relevant to the research) and be reviewed and approved before data is requested from a DSO by an institutional, or appropriate third-party, ethical review board, as described in Part II of the Code. (p. 27). In addition, there will be reference to an affiliated document titled "Best practices and reflection questions for the Code of Conduct." The document cross references the 3.0 guidelines with several key issues raised in the draft Code, and is designed to serve as a springboard for further ethical reflection on the part of those developing the sorts of research envisioned and circumscribed therein. This latter document will soon appear on the EDMO website as well along with other documents affiliated with the draft Code. Here I would like to thank especially: aline shakti franzke (University of Duisburg-Essen); Stine Lomborg (Copenhagen University); Elizabeth Buchanan (Marshfield Clinic Research Institute) Rich Ling ( Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters); and Michael Zimmer (Marquette University) for their very great helps in putting this document together. A thousand thanks to Rebekah and the Working Group, and I very much look forward to seeing how all of this unfolds. All best, - charles On 31/05/2022 16:30, Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L wrote:
Dear colleagues,
Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report <https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Media-Observatorys-Working-Group-on-Platform-to-Researcher-Data-Access-2022.pdf> .
The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year. Our main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code.
Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.)
Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context.
Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc.
Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu _______________________________________________ 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/
-- Professor Emeritus University of Oslo <http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html> 3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now available: <http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428>
Fascinating report. The detail is remarkable, insightful and helpful. Thank-you for sharing and all the work. These reports take incredible patience. It is well written as well. I notice deletions are mentioned in the context of holding data but not (unless I missed it) in the context of user-generated deletions. When a user generates a social data action (Tweet, RT, reply, etc.) then later deletes it, any researcher who may be holding the datapoint must also delete it or render it inaccessible. Very few do, in my experience. The "right to be forgotten" is still operational under GDPR, in my understanding of it, though I'd be happy to be updated. However, if some of you are holding my deleted Tweets in Europe in a spreadsheet, are you compliant? The term forgotten is not in the report. The term suspended does not appear in the report either but is fundamental to compliance with Twitter research terms. You cannot look at data from suspended accounts. Many academics are doing Twitter or Reddit data work because of generous data access options. I would say account suspensions and user deletions are fairly significant issues that should be kept in focus as systemic and ethically problematic failures in the current spreadsheet-centric paradigm for examining social data artifacts. On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 1:14 PM Charles M. Ess via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Dear colleagues,
as a quick follow up - first of all, a tremendous shout out to Rebekah for her work as chair of this project. Bringing together representatives from major platforms, experts in GDPR and related law, NGOs, practicing researchers (and even an ethicist) into sharp and focused dialogue over the year+ leading up to this publication, coupled with the agreements over various aspects and elements of the Code of Conduct, was an all but superhuman task. As someone privileged to participate under Chatham House Rules, I am allowed to say that there was universal and enthusiastic consensus affirming Rebekah's extraordinary work in getting us to this place - a place that one at the outset could reasonably doubt we would ever see.
Secondly: the draft Code endorses the AoIR ethics guidelines 3.0 as follows:
The research should follow the Ethical Guidelines for Internet Research of the Association of Internet Researchers (as well as any other specialized or sector-based guidelines relevant to the research) and be reviewed and approved before data is requested from a DSO by an institutional, or appropriate third-party, ethical review board, as described in Part II of the Code. (p. 27). In addition, there will be reference to an affiliated document titled "Best practices and reflection questions for the Code of Conduct." The document cross references the 3.0 guidelines with several key issues raised in the draft Code, and is designed to serve as a springboard for further ethical reflection on the part of those developing the sorts of research envisioned and circumscribed therein. This latter document will soon appear on the EDMO website as well along with other documents affiliated with the draft Code. Here I would like to thank especially: aline shakti franzke (University of Duisburg-Essen); Stine Lomborg (Copenhagen University); Elizabeth Buchanan (Marshfield Clinic Research Institute) Rich Ling ( Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters); and Michael Zimmer (Marquette University) for their very great helps in putting this document together.
A thousand thanks to Rebekah and the Working Group, and I very much look forward to seeing how all of this unfolds.
All best, - charles
On 31/05/2022 16:30, Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L wrote:
Dear colleagues,
Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report < https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Me...
.
The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year. Our main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code.
Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.)
Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context.
Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc.
Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu _______________________________________________ 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/
-- Professor Emeritus University of Oslo <http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now available: <http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428> _______________________________________________ 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. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*
Hi Stu, Deleted data and research data retention are among the most nuanced issues out there, in part because Member State laws take different positions on the issue of data retention. That’s one of the main reasons the Code provides a compendium of select Member State laws. That said, in general, there are a few things to keep in mind: First, while GDPR embraces the right to erasure (the “right to be forgotten” is outdated terminology), it is applicable when a data subject affirmatively invokes the right. Deleting one’s data from social media does not mean researchers are automatically required to delete said data from their own datasets. The draft Code addresses the right to erasure in two ways. 1) It discusses the issue of transparency and data subject transparency notifications. (See Part I.) Researchers (through their institutions) must provide a mechanism by which European data subjects can assess whether their data is likely to be part of a research project and potentially request removal. But data subjects must have appropriate grounds for this request, and those grounds are limited. (See Articles 17 & 19 of the GDPR.) Institutional DPOs should lead the way in determining what is a valid request. 2) Data retention/destruction plans are very much related to this question. As part of the Data Needs and Management Plan described in Part II of the Code, researchers will need to provide solid justification for choosing how long they will retain data and the steps by which they will destroy it. That justification should be tied to considerations of users’ rights, as well as considerations balancing scientific research needs (eg, study replication). GDPR recognizes both. Second, in requiring API users to delete suspended and deleted data, Twitter’s TOS go well beyond GDPR requirements. The Code cannot speak to Twitter’s TOS, only to the law. Twitter is free to impose additional restrictions on researchers. Third and finally, all of the platforms are skittish about their own long-term data retention policies. They generally delete data from their core pipelines after 90 days. We hope that a delegated act under the DSA (Article 31 of which will compel data access for researchers in certain circumstances), will help us tackle this. The Code itself hints at, but doesn’t yet go all in on, the need for platforms to retain data longer than this 90-day period when it is needed for independent research. But how to identify such data prospectively is tricky. We’ll need the DSA’s help (and, honestly, maybe some case law) to spell that out more. Hope this helps clarify—and offers greater insight into an issue that we researchers typically understand quite poorly. Chairing this Working Group was revelatory for me in so many ways. Rebekah On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 19:41 Shulman, Stu <stu@texifter.com> wrote:
Fascinating report. The detail is remarkable, insightful and helpful. Thank-you for sharing and all the work. These reports take incredible patience. It is well written as well.
I notice deletions are mentioned in the context of holding data but not (unless I missed it) in the context of user-generated deletions. When a user generates a social data action (Tweet, RT, reply, etc.) then later deletes it, any researcher who may be holding the datapoint must also delete it or render it inaccessible. Very few do, in my experience. The "right to be forgotten" is still operational under GDPR, in my understanding of it, though I'd be happy to be updated. However, if some of you are holding my deleted Tweets in Europe in a spreadsheet, are you compliant? The term forgotten is not in the report. The term suspended does not appear in the report either but is fundamental to compliance with Twitter research terms. You cannot look at data from suspended accounts. Many academics are doing Twitter or Reddit data work because of generous data access options. I would say account suspensions and user deletions are fairly significant issues that should be kept in focus as systemic and ethically problematic failures in the current spreadsheet-centric paradigm for examining social data artifacts.
On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 1:14 PM Charles M. Ess via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Dear colleagues,
as a quick follow up - first of all, a tremendous shout out to Rebekah for her work as chair of this project. Bringing together representatives from major platforms, experts in GDPR and related law, NGOs, practicing researchers (and even an ethicist) into sharp and focused dialogue over the year+ leading up to this publication, coupled with the agreements over various aspects and elements of the Code of Conduct, was an all but superhuman task. As someone privileged to participate under Chatham House Rules, I am allowed to say that there was universal and enthusiastic consensus affirming Rebekah's extraordinary work in getting us to this place - a place that one at the outset could reasonably doubt we would ever see.
Secondly: the draft Code endorses the AoIR ethics guidelines 3.0 as follows:
The research should follow the Ethical Guidelines for Internet Research of the Association of Internet Researchers (as well as any other specialized or sector-based guidelines relevant to the research) and be reviewed and approved before data is requested from a DSO by an institutional, or appropriate third-party, ethical review board, as described in Part II of the Code. (p. 27). In addition, there will be reference to an affiliated document titled "Best practices and reflection questions for the Code of Conduct." The document cross references the 3.0 guidelines with several key issues raised in the draft Code, and is designed to serve as a springboard for further ethical reflection on the part of those developing the sorts of research envisioned and circumscribed therein. This latter document will soon appear on the EDMO website as well along with other documents affiliated with the draft Code. Here I would like to thank especially: aline shakti franzke (University of Duisburg-Essen); Stine Lomborg (Copenhagen University); Elizabeth Buchanan (Marshfield Clinic Research Institute) Rich Ling ( Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters); and Michael Zimmer (Marquette University) for their very great helps in putting this document together.
A thousand thanks to Rebekah and the Working Group, and I very much look forward to seeing how all of this unfolds.
All best, - charles
On 31/05/2022 16:30, Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L wrote:
Dear colleagues,
Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report < https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Me...
.
The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year. Our main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code.
Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.)
Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context.
Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc.
Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu _______________________________________________ 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/
-- Professor Emeritus University of Oslo <http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now available: <http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428> _______________________________________________ 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. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*
-- Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu
Incredibly helpful...again! Truly appreciate this effort. On Wed, Jun 1, 2022 at 9:59 AM Tromble, Rebekah <rtromble@email.gwu.edu> wrote:
Hi Stu,
Deleted data and research data retention are among the most nuanced issues out there, in part because Member State laws take different positions on the issue of data retention. That’s one of the main reasons the Code provides a compendium of select Member State laws.
That said, in general, there are a few things to keep in mind:
First, while GDPR embraces the right to erasure (the “right to be forgotten” is outdated terminology), it is applicable when a data subject affirmatively invokes the right. Deleting one’s data from social media does not mean researchers are automatically required to delete said data from their own datasets.
The draft Code addresses the right to erasure in two ways. 1) It discusses the issue of transparency and data subject transparency notifications. (See Part I.) Researchers (through their institutions) must provide a mechanism by which European data subjects can assess whether their data is likely to be part of a research project and potentially request removal. But data subjects must have appropriate grounds for this request, and those grounds are limited. (See Articles 17 & 19 of the GDPR.) Institutional DPOs should lead the way in determining what is a valid request. 2) Data retention/destruction plans are very much related to this question. As part of the Data Needs and Management Plan described in Part II of the Code, researchers will need to provide solid justification for choosing how long they will retain data and the steps by which they will destroy it. That justification should be tied to considerations of users’ rights, as well as considerations balancing scientific research needs (eg, study replication). GDPR recognizes both.
Second, in requiring API users to delete suspended and deleted data, Twitter’s TOS go well beyond GDPR requirements. The Code cannot speak to Twitter’s TOS, only to the law. Twitter is free to impose additional restrictions on researchers.
Third and finally, all of the platforms are skittish about their own long-term data retention policies. They generally delete data from their core pipelines after 90 days. We hope that a delegated act under the DSA (Article 31 of which will compel data access for researchers in certain circumstances), will help us tackle this. The Code itself hints at, but doesn’t yet go all in on, the need for platforms to retain data longer than this 90-day period when it is needed for independent research. But how to identify such data prospectively is tricky. We’ll need the DSA’s help (and, honestly, maybe some case law) to spell that out more.
Hope this helps clarify—and offers greater insight into an issue that we researchers typically understand quite poorly. Chairing this Working Group was revelatory for me in so many ways.
Rebekah
On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 19:41 Shulman, Stu <stu@texifter.com> wrote:
Fascinating report. The detail is remarkable, insightful and helpful. Thank-you for sharing and all the work. These reports take incredible patience. It is well written as well.
I notice deletions are mentioned in the context of holding data but not (unless I missed it) in the context of user-generated deletions. When a user generates a social data action (Tweet, RT, reply, etc.) then later deletes it, any researcher who may be holding the datapoint must also delete it or render it inaccessible. Very few do, in my experience. The "right to be forgotten" is still operational under GDPR, in my understanding of it, though I'd be happy to be updated. However, if some of you are holding my deleted Tweets in Europe in a spreadsheet, are you compliant? The term forgotten is not in the report. The term suspended does not appear in the report either but is fundamental to compliance with Twitter research terms. You cannot look at data from suspended accounts. Many academics are doing Twitter or Reddit data work because of generous data access options. I would say account suspensions and user deletions are fairly significant issues that should be kept in focus as systemic and ethically problematic failures in the current spreadsheet-centric paradigm for examining social data artifacts.
On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 1:14 PM Charles M. Ess via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Dear colleagues,
as a quick follow up - first of all, a tremendous shout out to Rebekah for her work as chair of this project. Bringing together representatives from major platforms, experts in GDPR and related law, NGOs, practicing researchers (and even an ethicist) into sharp and focused dialogue over the year+ leading up to this publication, coupled with the agreements over various aspects and elements of the Code of Conduct, was an all but superhuman task. As someone privileged to participate under Chatham House Rules, I am allowed to say that there was universal and enthusiastic consensus affirming Rebekah's extraordinary work in getting us to this place - a place that one at the outset could reasonably doubt we would ever see.
Secondly: the draft Code endorses the AoIR ethics guidelines 3.0 as follows:
The research should follow the Ethical Guidelines for Internet Research of the Association of Internet Researchers (as well as any other specialized or sector-based guidelines relevant to the research) and be reviewed and approved before data is requested from a DSO by an institutional, or appropriate third-party, ethical review board, as described in Part II of the Code. (p. 27). In addition, there will be reference to an affiliated document titled "Best practices and reflection questions for the Code of Conduct." The document cross references the 3.0 guidelines with several key issues raised in the draft Code, and is designed to serve as a springboard for further ethical reflection on the part of those developing the sorts of research envisioned and circumscribed therein. This latter document will soon appear on the EDMO website as well along with other documents affiliated with the draft Code. Here I would like to thank especially: aline shakti franzke (University of Duisburg-Essen); Stine Lomborg (Copenhagen University); Elizabeth Buchanan (Marshfield Clinic Research Institute) Rich Ling ( Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters); and Michael Zimmer (Marquette University) for their very great helps in putting this document together.
A thousand thanks to Rebekah and the Working Group, and I very much look forward to seeing how all of this unfolds.
All best, - charles
On 31/05/2022 16:30, Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L wrote:
Dear colleagues,
Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report < https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Me...
.
The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year. Our main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code.
Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.)
Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context.
Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc.
Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu _______________________________________________ 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/
-- Professor Emeritus University of Oslo <http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now available: <http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428> _______________________________________________ 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. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*
-- Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu
-- Dr. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*
Labor Tech Research Network <http://labortechresearchnetwork.org/> (LaborTech) invites submissions for the Labor Tech Book and Graduate Student Paper Awards. LaborTech is an interdisciplinary and transnational group of experts concerned with the intersection of where technology meets work. We aim to reframe the conversation about technology and labor towards issues of power, inequality, and social justice, and incorporate themes of feminism, anti-racism, and transnationalism. We also seek to foster an inter-disciplinary, cross-regional, and community-oriented space for discussion, collaboration, and empowerment. As part of our launch as a nonprofit research network, LaborTech is inaugurating two Awards, one for Book and another for Graduate Student Paper, to honor works which have distinctive intellectual merit or activist impact, and have advanced the knowledge about labor and technology in the global society. We invite submissions that address our core focus on labor and technology, and which may simultaneously address feminism, anti-racism, and/or transnationalism. Please see our website ( www.labortechresearchnetwork.org) for a deeper discussion of our Mission (in About Us page), and examples of topics in our decade-long Speaker Series. LaborTech Award Committees will evaluate nominations on their contributions to, and impact on, studying the intersections of technology and labor. A small cash prize and certificate will be awarded to the winners. The winners will be announced in December of 2022 at the LaborTech Launch Event, at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Study of Science (4S) in Mexico. *Submission Requirements for Both Awards:* Works from all disciplines and methodologies are eligible for nomination. Nominations are open to members of Labor Tech Research Network, as well as the broader scholarly community. Nominations are welcome from authors, publishers, as well as self-nominations. We encourage submissions from women, people of color, queer communities, and those from the global south. The deadline for submissions is *August 1, 2022.* Please submit the following items in English: 1) an electronic version in PDF format (for books, if only print form is available, please contact us), and 2) a one-page nomination letter stating the significance and contribution of the work. Send materials or any questions to labortechresearchnetwork@gmail.com *Book Award Requirements:* - Monographs only (no edited volumes or anthologies) - Multiple authors are accepted - Published in the last three years, 2020-2022 *Graduate Student Paper Award Requirements:* The Graduate Student Paper Award is meant to honor labor and technology scholars in their early careers as students. The criteria for submissions include the following. - Writings by students who are currently in masters or doctoral programs, or who are graduating this year in 2022 - Single-authored pieces are preferred, but co-authors with other students are also accepted. Writings that are co-authored with advisors or other PhDs are not accepted. - Papers may be theoretical and/or empirical, as long as they have an original argument. A variety of methodological and research styles are welcome. - Papers may be published or unpublished. If published, then dating to the last three years, 2020-2022 - Minumum 25 pages, maximum 40 pages, double spaced
*Reminder* The Labor Tech Research Network <https://www.labortechresearchnetwork.org/> (LaborTech) invites submissions for our inaugural Book and Graduate Student Paper awards. *About Us* LaborTech is an interdisciplinary and transnational group of experts concerned with the intersection of technology and labor. We aim to reframe conversations about technology and labor towards issues of power, inequality, and social justice, and incorporate themes of feminism, anti-racism, and transnationalism. We also seek to foster an interdisciplinary, cross-regional, and community-oriented space for discussion, collaboration, and empowerment. For a deeper discussion of our mission, please see the 'About Us' <http://labortechresearchnetwork.org/index.php/about-us/> page on our website as well as examples of topics in our decade-long Speaker Series <http://labortechresearchnetwork.org/index.php/speaker-series/>. *Call for Nominations* As part of our launch as a nonprofit research network, LaborTech is inaugurating two awards (Book and Graduate Student Paper) to honor works which: - have distinctive intellectual merit or activist impact; - advance the knowledge about labor and technology in the global society; and - address our core focus on labor and technology and which may simultaneously address feminism, anti-racism, and/or transnationalism. Works from all disciplines and methodologies are eligible for nomination. Nominations are open to members and non-members of LaborTech. We encourage submissions from women, people of color, queer communities, and those from the global south. The deadline for submissions is August 1, 2022. Please submit the following items in English to labortechresearchnetwork@gmail.com: 1. An electronic version in PDF format (contact us if only print form is available for books) 2. A one-page nomination letter stating the significance and contribution of the work. The winners will be announced at the LaborTech Launch Event at the Annual meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science (4S) in Mexico in December 2022. Winners will be awarded a small cash prize and certificate. *Book Award submission criteria:* - Monographs only (no edited volumes or anthologies) - Multiple authors accepted - Published in the last three years (2020-22) *Graduate Student Paper Award submission criteria:* - Written by students currently enrolled in a graduate program or who have graduated in 2022 - Single-authored pieces preferred (co-authored pieces with other students accepted). Papers co-authored with advisors, faculty, or other PhDs are not accepted. - Papers may be published within the last three years (2020-22) or unpublished - Page length: 25-40 pages, double-spaced -- בתאריך יום ה׳, 2 ביוני 2022 ב-15:00 מאת Tammy Katsabian < tammyk4@gmail.com>:
Labor Tech Research Network <http://labortechresearchnetwork.org/> (LaborTech) invites submissions for the Labor Tech Book and Graduate Student Paper Awards. LaborTech is an interdisciplinary and transnational group of experts concerned with the intersection of where technology meets work. We aim to reframe the conversation about technology and labor towards issues of power, inequality, and social justice, and incorporate themes of feminism, anti-racism, and transnationalism. We also seek to foster an inter-disciplinary, cross-regional, and community-oriented space for discussion, collaboration, and empowerment.
As part of our launch as a nonprofit research network, LaborTech is inaugurating two Awards, one for Book and another for Graduate Student Paper, to honor works which have distinctive intellectual merit or activist impact, and have advanced the knowledge about labor and technology in the global society. We invite submissions that address our core focus on labor and technology, and which may simultaneously address feminism, anti-racism, and/or transnationalism. Please see our website ( www.labortechresearchnetwork.org) for a deeper discussion of our Mission (in About Us page), and examples of topics in our decade-long Speaker Series.
LaborTech Award Committees will evaluate nominations on their contributions to, and impact on, studying the intersections of technology and labor. A small cash prize and certificate will be awarded to the winners. The winners will be announced in December of 2022 at the LaborTech Launch Event, at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Study of Science (4S) in Mexico.
*Submission Requirements for Both Awards:* Works from all disciplines and methodologies are eligible for nomination. Nominations are open to members of Labor Tech Research Network, as well as the broader scholarly community. Nominations are welcome from authors, publishers, as well as self-nominations. We encourage submissions from women, people of color, queer communities, and those from the global south.
The deadline for submissions is *August 1, 2022.* Please submit the following items in English: 1) an electronic version in PDF format (for books, if only print form is available, please contact us), and 2) a one-page nomination letter stating the significance and contribution of the work. Send materials or any questions to labortechresearchnetwork@gmail.com
*Book Award Requirements:* - Monographs only (no edited volumes or anthologies) - Multiple authors are accepted - Published in the last three years, 2020-2022
*Graduate Student Paper Award Requirements:* The Graduate Student Paper Award is meant to honor labor and technology scholars in their early careers as students. The criteria for submissions include the following. - Writings by students who are currently in masters or doctoral programs, or who are graduating this year in 2022 - Single-authored pieces are preferred, but co-authors with other students are also accepted. Writings that are co-authored with advisors or other PhDs are not accepted. - Papers may be theoretical and/or empirical, as long as they have an original argument. A variety of methodological and research styles are welcome. - Papers may be published or unpublished. If published, then dating to the last three years, 2020-2022 - Minumum 25 pages, maximum 40 pages, double spaced
So I have been thinking about this for a few days and wanted to share another version of the argument. Why Looking at Deleted, Suspended, or Private Tweets Violates Academic Research Ethics https://vimeo.com/716757203 This short 2-minute video contributes to an ongoing discussion about the role of deleted, suspended, or protected Twitter data in academic research. Having spent years working as an academic getting funded by the NSF to do human subjects research, these points seem not altogether controversial. Dr. Stuart ShulmanU.S. Soccer Federation C-Licensed Coach On Wed, Jun 1, 2022 at 10:00 AM Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Hi Stu,
Deleted data and research data retention are among the most nuanced issues out there, in part because Member State laws take different positions on the issue of data retention. That’s one of the main reasons the Code provides a compendium of select Member State laws.
That said, in general, there are a few things to keep in mind:
First, while GDPR embraces the right to erasure (the “right to be forgotten” is outdated terminology), it is applicable when a data subject affirmatively invokes the right. Deleting one’s data from social media does not mean researchers are automatically required to delete said data from their own datasets.
The draft Code addresses the right to erasure in two ways. 1) It discusses the issue of transparency and data subject transparency notifications. (See Part I.) Researchers (through their institutions) must provide a mechanism by which European data subjects can assess whether their data is likely to be part of a research project and potentially request removal. But data subjects must have appropriate grounds for this request, and those grounds are limited. (See Articles 17 & 19 of the GDPR.) Institutional DPOs should lead the way in determining what is a valid request. 2) Data retention/destruction plans are very much related to this question. As part of the Data Needs and Management Plan described in Part II of the Code, researchers will need to provide solid justification for choosing how long they will retain data and the steps by which they will destroy it. That justification should be tied to considerations of users’ rights, as well as considerations balancing scientific research needs (eg, study replication). GDPR recognizes both.
Second, in requiring API users to delete suspended and deleted data, Twitter’s TOS go well beyond GDPR requirements. The Code cannot speak to Twitter’s TOS, only to the law. Twitter is free to impose additional restrictions on researchers.
Third and finally, all of the platforms are skittish about their own long-term data retention policies. They generally delete data from their core pipelines after 90 days. We hope that a delegated act under the DSA (Article 31 of which will compel data access for researchers in certain circumstances), will help us tackle this. The Code itself hints at, but doesn’t yet go all in on, the need for platforms to retain data longer than this 90-day period when it is needed for independent research. But how to identify such data prospectively is tricky. We’ll need the DSA’s help (and, honestly, maybe some case law) to spell that out more.
Hope this helps clarify—and offers greater insight into an issue that we researchers typically understand quite poorly. Chairing this Working Group was revelatory for me in so many ways.
Rebekah
On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 19:41 Shulman, Stu <stu@texifter.com> wrote:
Fascinating report. The detail is remarkable, insightful and helpful. Thank-you for sharing and all the work. These reports take incredible patience. It is well written as well.
I notice deletions are mentioned in the context of holding data but not (unless I missed it) in the context of user-generated deletions. When a user generates a social data action (Tweet, RT, reply, etc.) then later deletes it, any researcher who may be holding the datapoint must also delete it or render it inaccessible. Very few do, in my experience. The "right to be forgotten" is still operational under GDPR, in my understanding of it, though I'd be happy to be updated. However, if some of you are holding my deleted Tweets in Europe in a spreadsheet, are you compliant? The term forgotten is not in the report. The term suspended does not appear in the report either but is fundamental to compliance with Twitter research terms. You cannot look at data from suspended accounts. Many academics are doing Twitter or Reddit data work because of generous data access options. I would say account suspensions and user deletions are fairly significant issues that should be kept in focus as systemic and ethically problematic failures in the current spreadsheet-centric paradigm for examining social data artifacts.
On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 1:14 PM Charles M. Ess via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Dear colleagues,
as a quick follow up - first of all, a tremendous shout out to Rebekah for her work as chair of this project. Bringing together representatives from major platforms, experts in GDPR and related law, NGOs, practicing researchers (and even an ethicist) into sharp and focused dialogue over the year+ leading up to this publication, coupled with the agreements over various aspects and elements of the Code of Conduct, was an all but superhuman task. As someone privileged to participate under Chatham House Rules, I am allowed to say that there was universal and enthusiastic consensus affirming Rebekah's extraordinary work in getting us to this place - a place that one at the outset could reasonably doubt we would ever see.
Secondly: the draft Code endorses the AoIR ethics guidelines 3.0 as follows:
The research should follow the Ethical Guidelines for Internet Research of the Association of Internet Researchers (as well as any other specialized or sector-based guidelines relevant to the research) and be reviewed and approved before data is requested from a DSO by an institutional, or appropriate third-party, ethical review board, as described in Part II of the Code. (p. 27). In addition, there will be reference to an affiliated document titled "Best practices and reflection questions for the Code of Conduct." The document cross references the 3.0 guidelines with several key issues raised in the draft Code, and is designed to serve as a springboard for further ethical reflection on the part of those developing the sorts of research envisioned and circumscribed therein. This latter document will soon appear on the EDMO website as well along with other documents affiliated with the draft Code. Here I would like to thank especially: aline shakti franzke (University of Duisburg-Essen); Stine Lomborg (Copenhagen University); Elizabeth Buchanan (Marshfield Clinic Research Institute) Rich Ling ( Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters); and Michael Zimmer (Marquette University) for their very great helps in putting this document together.
A thousand thanks to Rebekah and the Working Group, and I very much look forward to seeing how all of this unfolds.
All best, - charles
On 31/05/2022 16:30, Tromble, Rebekah via Air-L wrote:
Dear colleagues,
Earlier today the European Digital Media Observatory's Working Group on Platform-to-Researcher Data Access published its official report <
https://edmo.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Report-of-the-European-Digital-Me...
.
The multi-stakeholder group has been hard at work for the last year.
Our
main charge was to draft a Code of Conduct under Article 40 of the GDPR that would facilitate better access to data for independent researchers. This report contains that draft Code.
Among other things, the draft Code lays out a framework for assessing the level of risk involved in accessing and conducting research with different types of platform data. It then lays out a number of safeguards that can be put in place to mitigate different levels of risks--helping to promote research that is ethical and responsible. (I tweeted more about it here <https://twitter.com/RebekahKTromble/status/1531611984944316419>.)
Getting to this point has entailed tremendously hard work by everyone involved, and, as the report itself notes, the work is far from over. But publishing the report and draft Code represent a major step forward. Though certain requirements are necessarily tied to specifications under the GDPR, the general principles and proposed solutions the report offers are instructive well beyond the European context.
Please feel free to circulate widely. And let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, etc.
Rebekah Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu _______________________________________________ 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/
-- Professor Emeritus University of Oslo <http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now available: <http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428> _______________________________________________ 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. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*
-- Dr. Rebekah Tromble Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University | Associate Professor, School of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University | Visiting Researcher, The Alan Turing Institute (London) | www.rebekahtromble.net iddp.gwu.edu
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/
Dear colleagues, The new issue of the open-access journal "Interculture Journal" is now available to read. This edition is dedicated to the topic: "Cyber-Utopia / Dystopia? Digital Interculturality between Cosmopolitan and Authoritarian Currents" and may be of interest to some. Access is available here: http://www.interculture-journal.com/index.php/icj Kind regards, Fergal Lenehan -- PD Dr Fergal Lenehan Researcher in the BMBF (German Federal Ministry for Education and Research)-funded Project "ReDICo: Researching Digital Interculturality Co-Operatively". https://redico.eu Intercultural Studies/IWK, Jena fergal.lenehan@uni-jena.de Tel.: +49 (0)3641 – 944379 Fax: +49 (0)3641 – 944372 Home Office: +49 (0)1737645442 Sprechzeiten: nach Vereinbarung Co-editor and co-author of the introduction to: "Reclaiming the European Street: Speeches on Europe and the EU" by Michael D. Higgins, President of Ireland. Published by Lilliput Press, 2021. Monographs: "Intellectuals and Europe" http://www.wvttrier.de/top/Beschreibungen/ID1398.html "Stereotypes, Ideology and Foreign Correspondents" https://www.peterlang.com/view/title/36893
participants (6)
-
Charles M. Ess -
Fergal Lenehan -
Shulman, Stu -
Stuart Shulman -
Tammy Katsabian -
Tromble, Rebekah