Fernanda Viegas, IBM
Fernanda Viegas addresses blogging and privacy. Her presentation is based on the results from a survey she conducted on bloggers’ subjective sense of privacy and perceptions of liability in 2004.
Fernanda B. Viégas has just finished her PhD at the MIT Media Lab and joined IBM Research. Her research focuses on the visualization of the traces people lea…
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Filed under: 2006, Blogging Ethics Panel
Jan Boyles, West Virginia University
Research has demonstrated mainstream media pundits are mired in partisan rancor and rhetoric, eschewing rational arguments for emotional opinions. Will bloggers follow suit?
Jan Boyles is an instructor and second-year master’s student at West Virginia University’s P.I. Reed School of Journalism. Her research emphases i…
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Filed under: 2006, Blogging Ethics Panel
Sandeep Junnarkar, Indiana University
Sandeep Junnarkar addresses harnessing the Web Blogging’s multimedia capabilities to tell the untold stories; and the technical, financial, journalistic and ethical challenges an independent journalist/blogger faces when trying to bypass the traditional media gate keepers.
SANDEEP JUNNARKAR is a Weil Visiting Professor o…
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Filed under: 2006, Blogging Ethics Panel
Martin Kuhn, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
A code of ethics for blogging should be based on the rhetorical form of blogging rather than on one particular function of blogs such as journalism. Values like “promoting interactivity” and “prioritizing the human elements of blog discourse” need to be prioritized to the same extent as values like transparency and accoun…
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Filed under: 2006, Blogging Ethics Panel