Question re: this research thing: is consent required of research that's done on, say, publications? Letters to the editor, say?
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Replying to @kukkurovaca
I think that one of the big disconnects is between how "published" twitter is perceived to be by different folks.
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Replying to @kukkurovaca
This also comes up a lot in journalism -- some really interesting and furious debates have happened re: the ethics of publishing tweets...
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Replying to @kukkurovaca
where some folks perceive tweets as being already part of the public record, and others consider it more like speech or correspondence...
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Replying to @kukkurovaca
for which permission may be required before it is published.
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Replying to @kukkurovaca
Note: I don't know anything about either journalism or research ethics; this is just me ruminating.
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Replying to @vossbrink
@vossbrink Yeah, it seems like what all this is getting is that people are applying to binary a public/private distinction to social media.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @kukkurovaca
@vossbrink These issues are interesting to me not b/c of twitter, but b/c of how much I as a photographer rely on "public" being absolute.2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @kukkurovaca
@kukkurovaca And how the same "reasonable expectation" grey area applies in both cases.3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
@vossbrink @kukkurovaca Photography, journalist, etc, doesn't exist in an academe that mandates certain rules. @USCAnnenberg does.
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