Re: [Air-L] Social media legal and privacy issues exercise
Hi Khan We just released a short open online module called "What Does Facebook Know About You?" https://open.uts.edu.au/facebookknowyou.html It guides students through downloading their data, exploring privacy settings, and demonstrates some of the ways that data can be used. Might be some useful resources in there? Simon On 8 August 2018 at 23:09, <air-l-request@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Job Ad: Assistant Professor in Urban Futures & Communication at UMass Amherst (Dr Jonathan Corpus Ong) 2. AoIR pre-conference workshop on Digital Research Ethics and Networked Intimate Publics is now inviting open registration. (T.L. Cowan) 3. Social media legal and privacy issues exercise (Gohar F. Khan) 4. Re: Social media legal and privacy issues exercise (Eskens, Sarah) 5. Re: Social media legal and privacy issues exercise (U. Reips) 6. cross-border data access by law enforcement agencies (Halefom Hailu) 7. Social media data collection (Nicola Langdon) 8. Job Opportunity in Participatory Design at M-ITI (Post-doc -preferred- or Junior Researcher) - Deadline for Application, August 20th (Maurizio) 9. Online survey about your social media data management practices, Amazon gift cards (Libby Hemphill) 10. Re: Social media data collection (Shulman, Stu) 11. Re: Social media data collection (Greenhalgh, Spencer)
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Message: 1 Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2018 21:35:08 +0100 From: Dr Jonathan Corpus Ong <jcong@umass.edu> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: [Air-L] Job Ad: Assistant Professor in Urban Futures & Communication at UMass Amherst Message-ID: <B31FC42C-E351-4AEA-81D4-CBD1AA9F5A6C@umass.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Dear colleagues,
I?m sharing this job ad for a tenure-track position in the Department of Communication at UMass. For information about our department and the post, the link is here: https://www.umass.edu/communication/node/1787 < https://www.umass.edu/communication/node/1787> .
Job Ad: Assistant Professor in Urban Futures and Communication The Department of Communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst seeks a communication scholar whose research and teaching focus on urban communication, environmental communication, and/or civics and governance in 'smart cities'. We seek theoretical and methodological innovation in researching the constitutive role of communication and information infrastructures in people's experience of the built environment. We seek a colleague whose work complements and extends the traditions in the department, which include digital media and public participation, cultural production and social inequality, and postcoloniality.
Additionally, the Department is interested in candidates who have demonstrated ability to contribute to the inclusive excellence and diversity mission of the department, college and university in research, teaching, and/or outreach. The rank will be at the Assistant Professor level. The position will begin Sept. 1, 2019 and will include responsibilities for teaching and supervision at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The ability to collaborate on and eventually lead interdisciplinary, grant-funded projects is desirable.
Review of applications will begin on October 15, 2018 and will continue until the position is filled. Applications should include a letter of interest, a CV, evidence of teaching effectiveness, and one article-length example of research, and names and contact information for three references. All materials should be submitted through the online website < http://careers.massachusetts.edu/cw/en-us/job/494748? lApplicationSubSourceID=11182%20>.
A completed PhD in Communication or closely allied field is required by the start of the appointment.
The university is committed to active recruitment of a diverse faculty and student body. The University of Massachusetts Amherst is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer of women, minorities, protected veterans, and individuals with disabilities and encourages applications from these and other protected group members. Because broad diversity is essential to an inclusive climate and critical to the University?s goals of achieving excellence in all areas, we will holistically assess the many qualifications of each applicant and favorably consider an individual?s record working with students and colleagues with broadly diverse perspectives, experiences, and backgrounds in educational, research or other work activities. We will also favorably consider experience overcoming or helping others overcome barriers to an academic degree and career.
Best, Jonathan ===== Jonathan Corpus Ong, PhD
Associate Professor in Global Digital Media Co-Editor-in-Chief, Television & New Media
University of Massachusetts Amherst N354 Integrative Learning Center 650 North Pleasant Street Amherst, MA 01003-1100 USA
Email: jcong@umass.edu <mailto:jcong@umass.edu> Webpage: https://www.umass.edu/communication/node/1525 < https://www.umass.edu/communication/node/1525> Twitter: @jonathan_c_ong
Data & Society Guest Blog ?Architects of Networked Disinformation?: https://medium.com/@MediaManipulation/architects- of-networked-disinformation-283b02b6dfb8 <https://medium.com/@ MediaManipulation/architects-of-networked-disinformation-283b02b6dfb8>
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Message: 2 Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2018 20:53:09 +0000 From: "T.L. Cowan" <tl.cowan@utoronto.ca> To: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: [Air-L] AoIR pre-conference workshop on Digital Research Ethics and Networked Intimate Publics is now inviting open registration. Message-ID: <YTXPR0101MB2303BA59F760FFB4DAB6C2FD92270@YTXPR0101MB2303. CANPRD01.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Hello,
I forgot to change the subject heading of my announcement! It is changed now.
AoIR pre-conference workshop on Digital Research Ethics and Networked Intimate Publics is now inviting open registration.
Workshop title: The Digital Research Ethics Collaboratory for Networked Intimate Publics: Storytelling, Materiality, Ethics & Praxis
Facilitators: T.L. Cowan (UToronto), Jasmine Rault (UToronto), Veronica Paredes (UCLA) and Izetta Autumn Mobley (University of Maryland, College Park)
In The Broken Earth trilogy, science fiction author N.K. Jemisin (2015, 2016, 2017) imagines a subterranean community called Castrima, a hidden place that is built and sustained by the energies and skills of the most powerful, reviled and thus most endangered specimens of humanity: the Oregens. From the surface, Castrima is invisible, buried below ruins. And underground, from the inside, Castrima looks cluttered, chaotic, disorienting: ?as if someone found an architect, made her build a city out of the most beautiful materials available, then threw those buildings into a box and jumbled them up for laughs? (2015: 338). Ykka, Castrima?s Head Woman, explains, ?This is what we?re trying to do here in Castrima: survive. Same as anyone. We?re just willing to innovate a little? (2015: 342). Jemisin?s speculative design of Castrima is a place made by and for minoritized subjects to protect their lives, to preserve their knowledge and cultural materials, and ensure their cultural survivance (Vizenor 2008; Tuck 2009).
This workshop will be led by former co-facilitators of the Feminist Technology Network (FemTechNet), collaborators in the Center for Solution to Online Violence (CSOV) and lead investigators of the Digital Research Ethics Collaboratory (DREC). We use the term ?minoritized? from the scholarly fields of Indigenous, Critical Race and Ethnic Studies, Queer, Sexuality, Trans-, Gender and Feminist Studies, to speak of populations who may not be in the minority at all ? indeed, statistically form the majority population in most cases ? but whose knowledges, cultural practices, histories and socialities have been consistently undermined, dismissed and rendered insignificant or troubling to the imagined majority (Ferguson 2004; Gopinath 2005; Sedgwick 1990, 2003; Smith 2010; Soto 2010). The infrastructures and networks of intimacy and distributed publicity are central technologies for the sustenance, support, thriving and survivance of minoritized people, knowledges, cultural materials, and c hosen communities. These network technologies are too often situated in academic literature and popular discourse as na?vely pre-digital or non-digital, naturally occurring or innate, rather than carefully and strategically constituted, tended-to and transformed with and as new media and communication infrastructures. In this workshop we invite participants to share stories and practices for the ethical research and engagement with minoritized materials and the networked intimate publics that create them. Workshop participants will take turns leading discussions from their own research experiences in attending to the innovations in labour, arts, organizing and research through which technologies for minoritized survivance manifest and mutate.
Like so many researchers we have been caught by the fever to (digitally) archive precarious, precious, minoritized, invisibilized, intimate, forgotten knowledges, scenes, resistance cultures, materials and alternative futures. Bound by their beauty (Siberry 1989), we are also, however, bound by the institutional and platform logics that we hope these archives can transform, and by accountability to the ?the people whose belongings have become [our] ?collections?? (Nowviski 2016). Conventionalised research practices reflect longstanding and ongoing acquisitional, abductive, possessive, extractive practices that bolster these structures, especially the imperialist, settler colonial model of dehumanization, occupation, control, theft, and non-reciprocity (Kovach 2009; Moreton-Robinson 2015; Murphy 2014; Simpson 2014; Tuhiwai Smith 2012).
This workshop comes from the perspectives that all research structures?not only those primarily oriented within or towards Indigenous communities?need to be reshaped in order to decolonize and unsettle the imperialist university and to dismantle the domination habits of academic knowledge production. Starting with the important work that AoIR collaborators have already contributed to the field of Digital Research Ethics (AoIR 2002; Markham and Buchanan 2012; Zimmer & Kinder-Kurlanda 2017), we invite AoIR-affiliated scholars?especially those of digital culture and researchers building online repositories, exhibitions and other forms of publication of minoritized materials?who are trying to break the habits of extractive and possessive research and publication logics and build-while-we-work-within epistemic infrastructures that acknowledge and jumble existing hiearchives of compensation, credit, value, precarity, security and exposure. Following Jemison?s fictional Castrima, the challe nge might be to defend against openness and exposure even in opposition to the institutional logics of our disciplines. This workshop will gather researchers who attend to, and attempt to translate into online information practice, the carefully cultivated tactics and cultures of privacy and counter-surveillance which were, and continue to be, necessary to the survival, and survivance, of minoritized people and cultures.
1. This is a half-day workshop. We will begin with 1 hour of presentations by the co-facilitators, followed by 1.5 hours of group workshopping current, past and future projects that participants bring to discuss, and a concluding 30 minutes drafting protocols, manifestos, best-practices and other collaborative (and future) possibilities.
2. AoIR participants can register for this workshop when they register for the conference; please come prepared to either workshop your own project or pitch in to workshop projects that other participants bring.
If you have already registered for the conference and would like to add this workshop please email ac [at] aoir [dot] org . For further information, please contact workshop organizers T.L. Cowan & Jas Rault at drecollab@gmail.com.
Thanks very much!
T.L. Cowan
-- T.L. Cowan, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Media Studies Department of Arts, Culture and Media (UTSC) Office: 411A Humanities Wing Faculty of Information (iSchool) Office: 649 Bissell Building University of Toronto <http://tlcowan.net/>
T.L. Cowan<http://tlcowan.net/> tlcowan.net Mixed Methods. I am a writer, performer, activist and professor living in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. I am currently an Assistant Professor of Media Studies in the Department of Arts, Culture & Media and the Faculty of Education at the University of Toronto.
-- T.L. Cowan, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Media Studies Department of Arts, Culture and Media (UTSC) Office: 411A Humanities Wing Faculty of Information (iSchool) Office: 649 Bissell Building University of Toronto <http://tlcowan.net/>
------------------------------
Message: 3 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 16:42:29 +1200 From: "Gohar F. Khan" <gohar.feroz@gmail.com> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: [Air-L] Social media legal and privacy issues exercise Message-ID: <CAERGarQMH3En=EBETHCkcX_Jm_dbiLSQVWGzD1v=nt=08mA7yw@mail. gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hi,
I am looking for ideas on interactive in-class exercise on social media legal and privacy issues for my undergrad students. Ideally, they should work in small groups to carry out the exercise. Any topic that fits within the broader scope of regal and/or privacy issues related to social media use/data will work. Normally, I would ask them to review a social media platform's privacy policy and report back on how they use your data. But this time I intend to do something different.
Any suggestions, please?
Cheers, Khan
--
*Khan, Gohar PhD **/ **Senior Lecturer Digital Business /* *Undergraduate and Graduate Convenor for Digital Business*
*Waikato Management School **/** University of Waikato* *Private Bag 3105* */* *Hamilton 3240*
*Ph: + 64 7 838 4233 **/* *gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz <gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz> **/ *Office: MSB.2.32D */* Web: gfkhan.wordpress.com
Check out my book on social media analytics <http://7layersanalytics.com/> and digital marketing analytics <https://www.routledge.com/Digital-Analytics-for- Marketing/Sponder-Khan/p/book/9781138190689> ----------- Social Identities: || Blog <http://gfkhan.wordpress.com/> || Twitter <https://twitter.com/gfkhan> || LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/pub/gohar-feroz-khan/7/62b/42> || Research Centre <http://centreforsocialtech.com/>||
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Message: 4 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 07:57:30 +0000 From: "Eskens, Sarah" <S.J.Eskens@uva.nl> To: "Gohar F. Khan" <gohar.feroz@gmail.com>, "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Social media legal and privacy issues exercise Message-ID: <47CB9B7C534B9D478B29EAFE19B11DFC4C8F42F7@MBX01.uva.nl> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
We always make students file a data subject access request at various organisations and let them report on that. What kind of data do you receive: only data you submitted yourself or also data derived from your online behavior, etc?
Best, Sarah
Sarah Eskens, LLM | PhD Candidate | Institute for Information Law, University of Amsterdam Visiting address: Nieuwe Achtergracht 166 | REC A 5.06 | 1018 WV Amsterdam Postal address: P.O. Box 1030 | 1000 BA Amsterdam | Netherlands s.j.eskens@uva.nl | Tel: +31 (0)20 525 3921 www.ivir.nl | www.saraheskens.eu | twitter/SarahEskens
________________________________________ From: Air-L [air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org] on behalf of Gohar F. Khan [ gohar.feroz@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2018 6:42 AM To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: [Air-L] Social media legal and privacy issues exercise
Hi,
I am looking for ideas on interactive in-class exercise on social media legal and privacy issues for my undergrad students. Ideally, they should work in small groups to carry out the exercise. Any topic that fits within the broader scope of regal and/or privacy issues related to social media use/data will work. Normally, I would ask them to review a social media platform's privacy policy and report back on how they use your data. But this time I intend to do something different.
Any suggestions, please?
Cheers, Khan
--
*Khan, Gohar PhD **/ **Senior Lecturer Digital Business /* *Undergraduate and Graduate Convenor for Digital Business*
*Waikato Management School **/** University of Waikato* *Private Bag 3105* */* *Hamilton 3240*
*Ph: + 64 7 838 4233 **/* *gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz <gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz> **/ *Office: MSB.2.32D */* Web: gfkhan.wordpress.com
Check out my book on social media analytics <http://7layersanalytics.com/> and digital marketing analytics <https://www.routledge.com/Digital-Analytics-for- Marketing/Sponder-Khan/p/book/9781138190689> ----------- Social Identities: || Blog <http://gfkhan.wordpress.com/> || Twitter <https://twitter.com/gfkhan> || LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/pub/gohar-feroz-khan/7/62b/42> || Research Centre <http://centreforsocialtech.com/>|| _______________________________________________ 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/
------------------------------
Message: 5 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 11:40:05 +0200 From: "U. Reips" <u.reips@ikerbasque.org> To: "Gohar F. Khan" <gohar.feroz@gmail.com>, air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] Social media legal and privacy issues exercise Message-ID: <p06240808d79069966e90@[10.211.55.3]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
Hi Khan, we made available an instance of Social Lab (http://sociallab.es), an "open source Facebook") that interactively teaches privacy issues in social media. Have class members register at http://en.sociallab.es with login names that begin with a class code, if you want them to be able to recognize each other in the network.
All best Ulf
At 16:42 Uhr +1200 08.08.2018, Gohar F. Khan wrote:
Hi,
I am looking for ideas on interactive in-class exercise on social media legal and privacy issues for my undergrad students. Ideally, they should work in small groups to carry out the exercise. Any topic that fits within the broader scope of regal and/or privacy issues related to social media use/data will work. Normally, I would ask them to review a social media platform's privacy policy and report back on how they use your data. But this time I intend to do something different.
Any suggestions, please?
Cheers, Khan
--
*Khan, Gohar PhD **/ **Senior Lecturer Digital Business /* *Undergraduate and Graduate Convenor for Digital Business*
*Waikato Management School **/** University of Waikato* *Private Bag 3105* */* *Hamilton 3240*
*Ph: + 64 7 838 4233 **/* *gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz <gohar.khan@waikato.ac.nz> **/ *Office: MSB.2.32D */* Web: gfkhan.wordpress.com
Check out my book on social media analytics <http://7layersanalytics.com/
and digital marketing analytics <https://www.routledge.com/Digital-Analytics-for- Marketing/Sponder-Khan/p/book/9781138190689> ----------- Social Identities: || Blog <http://gfkhan.wordpress.com/> || Twitter <https://twitter.com/gfkhan> || LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/pub/gohar-feroz-khan/7/62b/42> || Research Centre <http://centreforsocialtech.com/>|| _______________________________________________ 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/
------------------------------
Message: 6 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 13:19:42 +0200 From: Halefom Hailu <halefom03@gmail.com> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: [Air-L] cross-border data access by law enforcement agencies Message-ID: <CAGdWfwRQjOTO5srU_RFJoPpbFJYSZ8LCKZBvOQ0ET072qyW F9Q@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
ARTICLE
I am researching new legal and policy initiatives regarding cross-border data access by law enforcement agencies in Europe and beyond. I am aware of the U.S. CLOUD Act, the EU?s e-evidence proposal, and Council of Europe?s proposed additional protocol to the Budapest convention. I am looking for such initiatives at national, regional and international levels and can be proposed by any actor (government, private, civil society). I would appreciate if anyone has any suggestion.
Kind regards,
Halefom
---------------------------------------------------- HALEFOM HAILU ABRAHA Marie Curie Research Fellow, University of Malta +356 77119775 @halefom6 <https://twitter.com/halefom6>*@ethiocyberlaws* Publication: https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=3q4ySDcAAAAJ
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Message: 7 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 11:28:49 +0000 From: Nicola Langdon <nicola.langdon@plymouth.ac.uk> To: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: [Air-L] Social media data collection Message-ID: <AM0PR03MB4099D6C79603DD0EF693167EA1260@AM0PR03MB4099. eurprd03.prod.outlook.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Dear all,
I am a post-doc researcher based at the University of Plymouth. I am investigating the media framing of renewable energy and would like to capture the conversations occurring about this through social media, particularly Twitter.
My previous experience with this has been limited to qualitative analysis via a manual retrieval of tweets via Twitter's advanced search (obviously small in number compared to large-scale mining) and coding this in NVivo.
I have heard of many third-party sites that previously collected tweets in bulk via Twitter's API, (I think!) (for example Twapperkeeper and I have previously used the free element of Topsy) but many of these seem to no longer be in existence which has led me to query whether this is compliant with Twitter's user policies.
I know there have been many conversations around this before but can anybody clarify whether it is possible to collect Tweets in bulk related to specific key words or hashtags? And if so, is there a specific programme that can assist me with this? For example, can I set something up to capture the tweets occurring using specific key words/hashtags over a few months? And is this permissible with Twitter's Ts & Cs?
I am currently exploring the possibility of using Keyhole - has anybody used this before?
I know there have been numerous similar enquiries so please forgive me for asking again. I do not know very much about computer programming and have never used R or Python so I would appreciate if somebody can explain this to me without too much technical terminology if possible!
With thanks, Nicola
Dr Nicola Langdon Researcher -Media Framing of Deep Geothermal Energy Sustainable Earth Institute Room 101, 1 Kirkby Place, Plymouth, PL4 8AA
Tel: +44 (0)1752 585617 Twitter: @nicolaklangdon
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Message: 8 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 12:49:59 +0100 From: Maurizio <maurizio.teli@gmail.com> To: air-l <air-l@listserv.aoir.org>, "stsgrad@googlegroups.com" <stsgrad@googlegroups.com>, "stsitalia@googlegroups.com" <stsitalia@googlegroups.com>, "medianthro@easaonline.org" <medianthro@easaonline.org>, "anthrodesign@yahoogroups.com" <anthrodesign@yahoogroups.com>, "CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS@listserv. acm.org" <CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS@listserv.acm.org> Subject: [Air-L] Job Opportunity in Participatory Design at M-ITI (Post-doc -preferred- or Junior Researcher) - Deadline for Application, August 20th Message-ID: <CAE7Hv2GwtaMRf98ED1JEX_2Uq93t9-r_VGYBJtvVACfsVV83eg@ mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
**apologies for crossposting**
Dear colleagues
The Grassroots Radio team, led by the Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute (Madeira-ITI), seeks a researcher with an interest in the participatory design of the interfaces for community governance of networked radio stations, with a particular focus on commons-based forms of governance and cooperative management. The hired person will be collaborating with the international partners of the consortium on the identified tasks, and will have the opportunity to produce original collaborative research and joint publications with other members of the network, as well as being afforded funding for travel to partner sites, and for attending conferences and workshops. While the emphasis of this work is on the participatory design of the governance of radio stations, a candidate with strong interdisciplinary skills would be able to learn many of the domain-specific approaches on the job.
Grassroots Radio is creating a game-changing network of inclusive digital platforms for citizen engagement, community deliberation, and the free flow of information within, into, and out of geographic communities by piloting solutions for connected, inexpensive, community owned and operated radio across Europe. Building on the success of the existing RootIO platform ( www.rootio.org) ? with its proven commons-oriented technology and catalytic capacities for promoting collective awareness and action, participatory innovation, community resilience, and media pluralism ? we are deploying and testing a network of low-power community radio stations in Ireland, Portugal, and Romania as part of the Horizon 2020 Grassroot Wavelengths project (n? 780890), funded by the European Commission.
The initial contract will be for a period of 12 months, for potential renewable up to a maximum of 24 months. More detailed info on the job and the application process:
https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/327868
Please, circulate it to whoever you think could be interested.
Best
Maurizio
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Message: 9 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 08:12:53 -0400 From: Libby Hemphill <libbyh@umich.edu> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: [Air-L] Online survey about your social media data management practices, Amazon gift cards Message-ID: <CABM-Kigv7gACurAUQBoNkfB-ukiTnx7YMHk1R2o=0E0M1dBbAA@ mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
We're surveying researchers who use social media data to gain insight about their data management practices, and we want to hear from you!
Survey Link: https://umich.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9ymE2Wep3D3v8Jn
We are especially interested in the ways researchers are thinking and talking about what they do to collect and manage data sets from social media platforms. Your answers will help us understand how to support researchers using social media data and potentially inform the development of shared archives. We ask that if you use a data management plan that you upload a copy, so it may help to have that document ready before starting the survey. You must hold a university, government, or industry affiliation and use social media data in your research to qualify for the survey.
As a thank you for participating, those who complete the survey will be entered to win one of three $100 Amazon gift cards.
Please email the project's director, Libby Hemphill, PhD <* libbyh@umich.edu <libbyh@umich.edu>>*, or research assistant, Rebekah Small <* rebekasm@umich.edu <ebekasm@umich.edu>>* with questions or comments.
Libby Hemphill Director, Resource Center for Minority Data <http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/RCMD>, ICPSR <http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/> Research Associate Professor, Institute for Social Research <http://home.isr.umich.edu/> Associate Professor, School of Information <https://www.si.umich.edu/> University of Michigan
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Message: 10 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 08:36:25 -0400 From: "Shulman, Stu" <stu@texifter.com> To: Nicola Langdon <nicola.langdon@plymouth.ac.uk> Cc: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Social media data collection Message-ID: <CAAtQ8JTQ1UJOYzn_wO3fx3K+1W4ZNKqCPudaxpgDU-XsO0PSFg@ mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
https://gwu-libraries.github.io/sfm-ui/posts/2017-09-14-twitter-data
This is the #1 Google search result for "Twitter Data Research" on my browser. It is from the GWU library system Twitter experts.
They do a nice job laying out the options and are currently updating this top-ranked post.
Twitter: @SocialFeedMgr
On Wed, Aug 8, 2018 at 7:28 AM, Nicola Langdon < nicola.langdon@plymouth.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear all,
I am a post-doc researcher based at the University of Plymouth. I am investigating the media framing of renewable energy and would like to capture the conversations occurring about this through social media, particularly Twitter.
My previous experience with this has been limited to qualitative analysis via a manual retrieval of tweets via Twitter's advanced search (obviously small in number compared to large-scale mining) and coding this in NVivo.
I have heard of many third-party sites that previously collected tweets in bulk via Twitter's API, (I think!) (for example Twapperkeeper and I have previously used the free element of Topsy) but many of these seem to no longer be in existence which has led me to query whether this is compliant with Twitter's user policies.
I know there have been many conversations around this before but can anybody clarify whether it is possible to collect Tweets in bulk related to specific key words or hashtags? And if so, is there a specific programme that can assist me with this? For example, can I set something up to capture the tweets occurring using specific key words/hashtags over a few months? And is this permissible with Twitter's Ts & Cs?
I am currently exploring the possibility of using Keyhole - has anybody used this before?
I know there have been numerous similar enquiries so please forgive me for asking again. I do not know very much about computer programming and have never used R or Python so I would appreciate if somebody can explain this to me without too much technical terminology if possible!
With thanks, Nicola
Dr Nicola Langdon Researcher -Media Framing of Deep Geothermal Energy Sustainable Earth Institute Room 101, 1 Kirkby Place, Plymouth, PL4 8AA
Tel: +44 (0)1752 585617 Twitter: @nicolaklangdon
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Message: 11 Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 13:09:00 +0000 From: "Greenhalgh, Spencer" <spencer.greenhalgh@uky.edu> To: Nicola Langdon <nicola.langdon@plymouth.ac.uk> Cc: "air-l@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Social media data collection Message-ID: <5BC197DA-9BE3-4165-9576-C11DA1418EDE@uky.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Hi Nicola,
I regularly use TAGS (Twitter Archiving Google Sheets; tags.hawksey.info) as a low-barrier-of-entry way to capture tweets containing key words or hashtags over the course of a few months. I highly recommend it for anyone who wants to collect Twitter data without doing any programming.
Best,
Spencer
------ Spencer Greenhalgh, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Science College of Communication and Information University of Kentucky
spencergreenhalgh.com twitter.com/spgreenhalgh
On 8Aug 2018, at 07:28, Nicola Langdon <nicola.langdon@plymouth.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear all,
I am a post-doc researcher based at the University of Plymouth. I am investigating the media framing of renewable energy and would like to capture the conversations occurring about this through social media, particularly Twitter.
My previous experience with this has been limited to qualitative analysis via a manual retrieval of tweets via Twitter's advanced search (obviously small in number compared to large-scale mining) and coding this in NVivo.
I have heard of many third-party sites that previously collected tweets in bulk via Twitter's API, (I think!) (for example Twapperkeeper and I have previously used the free element of Topsy) but many of these seem to no longer be in existence which has led me to query whether this is compliant with Twitter's user policies.
I know there have been many conversations around this before but can anybody clarify whether it is possible to collect Tweets in bulk related to specific key words or hashtags? And if so, is there a specific programme that can assist me with this? For example, can I set something up to capture the tweets occurring using specific key words/hashtags over a few months? And is this permissible with Twitter's Ts & Cs?
I am currently exploring the possibility of using Keyhole - has anybody used this before?
I know there have been numerous similar enquiries so please forgive me for asking again. I do not know very much about computer programming and have never used R or Python so I would appreciate if somebody can explain this to me without too much technical terminology if possible!
With thanks, Nicola
Dr Nicola Langdon Researcher -Media Framing of Deep Geothermal Energy Sustainable Earth Institute Room 101, 1 Kirkby Place, Plymouth, PL4 8AA
Tel: +44 (0)1752 585617 Twitter: @nicolaklangdon
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