Social media research raises privacy and ethics issues - 1 views
-
Social media research raises privacy and ethics issues
- ...19 more annotations...
-
-
-
Relevance: this information relates to most everyone on this planet who uses the internet. The article says everytime you search something or share news on your facebook page, you have no idea who is actually reading it. This article is good for a lot of people to read to get information and gain knowledge. I would be comfortable siting this website because it is USA Today.
-
-
-
"Facebook is transformed from a public space to a behavioral laboratory," says the study, which cites a Harvard-based research project of 1,700 college-based Facebook users in which it became possible to "deanonymize parts of the data set," or cross-reference anonymous data to make student identification possible.
-
Facebook data scientist Adam Kramer, of the Menlo Park, Calif.-based company, outlined what the company is learning as part of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology meeting in Austin. Its president, social psychologist James Pennebaker, of the University of Texas-Austin, says privacy is a big issue for the research world.
-
"Facebook especially, and Microsoft, is scared to death about privacy issues," he says. "A bunch of researchers have access to everybody's posts and Facebook is built on what's yours is private. They are struggling with the problem the same way as the scientific community."
-
Attorney and privacy expert Parry Aftab, of New York City — a member of Facebook's Safety Advisory Board — suggests that users shouldn't worry because the very large companies such as Twitter, Google, Microsoft and Facebook have privacy policies for users."The sites will never provide personally identifiable information unless they have the consent of the users. And there is legal recourse if they're using it in any other way," she says.
-
-
Accuracy: These 5 paragraphs beginning with "facebook is transformed..." shows the author got her information from credible sources such as a Harvard based research project, a Facebook data scientist Adam Kramer, an attorney and privacy expert, and many more. The article is free of spelling and grammer mistakes.
-
-
-
Every time you search online for the best restaurant deal, share good news or bad with your Facebook friends, or tweet to your followers, your "audience" is bigger than you know.
-
Sharon Jayson, USA TODAY
-
Authority: the author here could be credible based on the study of politics and ethical research experience is mentions when you click on the name in the article. Also you uses other soures to back up the arguments she holds about how you leaving your "cyber" trail when on certain sites.
-
Authority: the author here could be credible based on the study of politics and ethical research experience is mentions when you click on the name in the article. Also you uses other soures to back up the arguments she holds about how you leaving your "cyber" trail when on certain sites.
-
-
every online move leaves cyber footprints that are rapidly becoming fodder for research without you ever realizing it
-
Relevance: The intended audience here would be those that are unaware of what can and cannot hurt them when it comes to just posting anything, a trail is being form. This information is crucial to my topic because it proves the important nature of becoming more aware, it cannot be stressed enough of the audience such as jobs, peers and co-workers see you posting.
-
Relevance: The intended audience here would be those that are unaware of what can and cannot hurt them when it comes to just posting anything, a trail is being form. This information is crucial to my topic because it proves the important nature of becoming more aware, it cannot be stressed enough of the audience such as jobs, peers and co-workers see you posting.
-
-
Using social media for academic research is accelerating and raising ethical concerns along the way, as vast amounts of information collected by private companies — including Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Twitter — are giving new insight into all aspects of everyday life.
-
says social psychologist Ilka Gleibs, an assistant professor at the London School of Economics in London, whose study about social networking sites for research field studies has been drawing attention since it went online in January in the journal Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy.
-
Accuracy: Not only does this fall under Authority due to the reference entered into the article but it show the research and evidenced gather by Sharon Johnson. She picked a highly expert pyschologist to warn the audience to take this matter more serious than what the intended audience may be viewing Facebook. With the professor being from a school in London, it shows that this source is unbiased to the American views of Facebook.
-
Accuracy: Not only does this fall under Authority due to the reference entered into the article but it show the research and evidenced gather by Sharon Johnson. She picked a highly expert pyschologist to warn the audience to take this matter more serious than what the intended audience may be viewing Facebook. With the professor being from a school in London, it shows that this source is unbiased to the American views of Facebook.
-
-
Researchers who use these large sets of data "need to be especially cautious about the quality of the data and the error it can produce."
-
March 12, 2014
-
Currency: This was the was posted March 12, 2014, this article was very much timely and the topic I have needs the more recent views because my topics touches on the effectiveness of how to maintain your privacy while on socail medias/networks.
-
Currency: This was the was posted March 12, 2014, this article was very much timely and the topic I have needs the more recent views because my topics touches on the effectiveness of how to maintain your privacy while on socail medias/networks.
-