Category Archives: Blogs and community

Blogs and community

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Blogging and communities
Research Ethics
Back on air

Blogging and communities

Back in January I asked a question at a conference about CoPs and web2.0

“How are we going to hold the more fragile communities together when some of the key contributors may be increasingly tempted to publish their ideas mainly on their own blogs to the detriment of the overall level of interaction?”

Since then, there has been a discussion on ACTKM mailing list mostly entitled “Blogs vs Forums” which has thrown up some possible answers, for example the suggestion that forum discussions go deeper and last longer, whereas blog conversations (where they happen at all), tend to fizzle out quite quickly.

You have to be careful though, not to imagine that it’s in the comments attached to blog posts that conversations will normally take place. The comments area may look like forums, but they are not, and the real conversation taking place in the blogosphere tends to happen between blogs, typically with one blogger writing a post which picks up and develops an idea referencing what another blogger posted earlier on their own blog, and so on.

In such a way, possible blogging ”communities” bound together by hyperlinks, RSS, trackbacks, pings tags and searches may arise deliberately or spontaneously in a more or less decentralised fashion.

Jack Vinson certainly entertains the idea of blogging and communities

But are these bloggers, standing as they do somewhat aloof from the forums which they may also take part in, helping to draw in wider participation from the general web, through their high ranking in the search engines and engagement with wider communities, or are they drawing energy and ideas away from forums, diluting the special power of many-to-many asynchronous dialogue?

It is perhaps at the boundaries where the two worlds (blogs and forums) meet that interesting things are happening and future trends may perhaps be spotted.

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Posted in Blogs and community, Tools |

Research Ethics

I was particularly pleased to receive the comments from Rosanna Tarsiero after I sent an unsolicited email invite to the pilot exhibition. I think I’ll have to break up my response into different posts, since there is so much to work on.

On ethics Rosanna said,

As a starter on Internet research ethics:

It is *very* important that whatever the research is about we start with an ethical design and write a statement before starting collecting data.

That idea about writing a statement of ethics was just what I needed to do, to clarify my own ideas, to help with justification and to use in practise. I’m aware that the statement I’ve come up with is not fully comprehensive, there are some points which need adding, but I’ve also learned that no ethical policy ever can be complete and finished.

This is my statement as included in the report14 document and also included on my user page in the DARwiki:

Statement of Research Ethics

I will undertake each cycle or phase of research with a genuine intent to make improvements which I hope will bring benefit to myself and/or to others. Should it become apparent either to myself or as expressed by others that the action taken is having an opposite effect then I will abandon that cycle prematurely or take steps to mitigate the damage if the benefits are thought to substantially outweigh the disadvantages.

I will not take actions and decisions lightly, but after having given them serious reflective thought including an exploration of my own assumptions and motives.

I value the thoughts and opinions of others especially where they disagree with my own, and will endeavor to make space for them to be reported as a diversity with equal status.

Where personal writing is collected as data from anywhere other than fully public spaces, then permission to publish will be sought in each case, and anonymity will be offered as an option. In the case of data already published in public spaces where the implication of fair use is already granted, then I will ensure that the correct attribution remains attached to the author’s words but also be prepared to remove any such reference upon request, even after publication of my work.

The starter referred to is from the Association of Internet Researchers and that was a valuable lead in itself. I joined their mailing list just in time to hear one of the professors announce that he would no longer accept any of his students citing Wikipedia and an ensuing discussion which inspired Danah Boyd’s blog, and the appearance of Jimmy Wales to intervene on behalf of himself. I don’t yet know whether that discussion is typical of the AOIR, but if it it I will be a little disappointed not with the quality of discussion and views aired, but with the prevalent idea that Internet Research is all about looking things up on the internet for academic purposes. So maybe that particular group is the association for academic internet research, I’ll have to see.

Since then I’ve found a few other papers about Internet research ethics and added links to them on a new page – Ethics. If anyone knows more, please do add them in.

Technorati Tags: distributedactionresearch, ethics

Posted in Blogs and community, Exhibition, Wiki | Tagged , , , , , , , , |

Back on air

Hey, the blog’s working again after a couple of days’ downtime. I wonder if the reader noticed.

Posted in Blogs and community |

Thanks for reading Andy Roberts articles about Blogs and community on the DARnet Blog