Your Thoughts Matter
The state of Internet privacy in 2013: Research roundup
Source: JournalistsResource.orgConcerns about the decline in personal privacy have long troubled citizens, scholars and politicians. The issue was most famously raised in “The Right to Privacy,” published in the Harvard Law Review in 1890 by jurists Samuel D. Warren and Louis Brandeis, the future Supreme Court justice.
What’s new in digital and social media research, July 2014: Online incivility and offensive content, Twitter and fact-checking, new media civics
Source: JournalistsResource.orgPublic intimacy: Disclosure interpretation and social judgments on Facebook
Source: JournalistsResource.orgComing and Going on Facebook
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What’s new in digital scholarship: May 2013
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What’s new in digital scholarship: June 2013
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Civil movements: Facebook and Twitter in the Arab Spring
Source: JournalistsResource.orgNews coverage of the “Arab Spring” has often focused on the potential role of social media in facilitating the Middle East’s ongoing political upheaval. Tools such as such as Facebook and Twitter, it has been suggested, helped citizens communicate and organize when governments were persistently unresponsive to their requests, and may have played a central role in the still-unfolding events.
May we have your attention please? Human rights NGOs and global communication
Source: JournalistsResource.orgSocial networking sites: Levels of trust, engagement
Source: JournalistsResource.orgFor increasing numbers of people, sites such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn are becoming crucial platforms for communicating with friends, family and work colleagues. Just as the mass-market introduction of phones, radio and the telegram changed patterns of emotional, social and political interaction across society, so too are Internet-based technologies and applications now. Precisely how these changes will play out, though, is just emerging.