AGILE ETHICS FOR MASSIFIED RESEARCH AND VISUALIZATION

In this paper, the authors examine some of the implications of born-digital research environments by discussing the emergence of data mining and the analysis of social media platforms. With the rise of individual online activity in chat rooms, social networking sites and micro-blogging services, new repositories for social science research have become available in large quantities. Given the changes of scale that accompany such research, both in terms of data mining and the communication of results, the authors term this type of research ‘massified research’. This article argues that while the private and commercial processing of these new massive data sets is far from unproblematic, the use by academic practitioners poses particular challenges with respect to established ethical protocols. These involve reconfigurations of the external relations between researchers and participants, as well as the internal relations that compose the identities of the participant, the researcher and that of the data. Consequently, massified research and its outputs operate in a grey area of undefined conduct with respect to these concerns. The authors work through the specific case study of using Twitter's public Application Programming Interface for research and visualization. To conclude, this article proposes some potential best practices to extend current procedures and guidelines for such massified research. Most importantly, the authors develop these under the banner of ‘agile ethics’. The authors conclude by making the counterintuitive suggestion that researchers make themselves as vulnerable to potential data mining as the subjects who comprise their data sets: a parity of practice.

[1]  Steven Weber,et al.  The Success of Open Source , 2004 .

[2]  A. Beaulieu,et al.  RETHINKING RESEARCH ETHICS FOR MEDIATED SETTINGS , 2012 .

[3]  E. Tufte,et al.  The visual display of quantitative information , 1984, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[4]  Kevin C. Desouza,et al.  Information politics on the Web , 2007, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[5]  Daniel M. Romero,et al.  Influence and passivity in social media , 2010, ECML/PKDD.

[6]  Edward Rolf Tufte,et al.  The visual display of quantitative information , 1985 .

[7]  David A. Morrison Systematics as Cyberscience: Computers, Change, and Continuity in Science , 2009 .

[8]  Geoffrey C. Bowker,et al.  Information ecology: open system environment for data, memories, and knowing , 2007, Journal of Intelligent Information Systems.

[9]  Danah Boyd,et al.  Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship , 2007, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[10]  N. Marres,et al.  Subsuming the ground: how local realities of the Fergana Valley, the Narmada Dams and the BTC pipeline are put to use on the Web , 2008 .

[11]  Raymond M. Lee,et al.  The SAGE handbook of online research methods , 2008 .

[12]  Martin Wattenberg,et al.  Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualizations , 2004, CHI.

[13]  Howard Rheingold,et al.  The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier , 2000 .

[14]  A. Feenberg,et al.  Involving the Virtual Subject , 2001, Ethics and Information Technology.

[15]  David Lazer,et al.  Inferring friendship network structure by using mobile phone data , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[16]  Timothy Webmoor From Silicon Valley to the Valley of Teotihuacan: The “Yahoo!s” of New Media and Digital Heritage , 2008 .

[17]  A. Friedberg Virilio’s Screen: The Work of Metaphor in the Age of Technological Convergence , 2004 .

[18]  Shane Warden,et al.  The art of agile development , 2007 .

[19]  M. J. Kraak,et al.  Cartography: Visualization of Geospatial Data , 1996 .

[20]  C. Ess Digital Media Ethics , 2009 .

[21]  Annamaria Carusi Beyond Anonymity: Data as representation in e−research ethics , 2008 .

[22]  Rodney Harrison,et al.  Excavating Second Life , 2009 .

[23]  W. Dutton,et al.  Experience with New Tools and Infrastructures of Research: An Exploratory Study of Distance From, and Attitudes Toward, e‐Research , 2009 .

[24]  A. Carusi,et al.  From data archive to ethical labyrinth , 2009 .

[25]  Paul W. Jeffreys The Developing Conception of e-Research , 2010, World Wide Research.

[26]  Christine Hine,et al.  Databases as Scientific Instruments and Their Role in the Ordering of Scientific Work , 2006 .

[27]  D. Boyd Why Youth (Heart) Social Network Sites: The Role of Networked Publics in Teenage Social Life , 2007 .

[28]  Mervyn Levin,et al.  World Wide Research - Reshaping the Sciences and Humanities , 2011, World Wide Research.

[29]  Balachander Krishnamurthy,et al.  Characterizing privacy in online social networks , 2008, WOSN '08.

[30]  Jim Everett,et al.  Coming of Age in Second Life: An Anthropologist Explores the Virtually Human , 2010 .

[31]  Christina Allen,et al.  What's Wrong with the 'Golden Rule'? Conundrums of Conducting Ethical Research in Cyberspace , 1996, Inf. Soc..

[32]  Duncan J. Watts,et al.  Who says what to whom on twitter , 2011, WWW.

[33]  William H. Dutton Reconfiguring Access in Research: Information, Expertise, and Experience , 2010, World Wide Research.

[34]  Christine Hine,et al.  New Infrastructures for Knowledge Production: Understanding E-science , 2006 .

[35]  Anne Beaulieu,et al.  Research Note: From co-location to co-presence: Shifts in the use of ethnography for the study of knowledge , 2010 .

[36]  Ken Auletta,et al.  Googled: The End of the World as We Know It , 2009 .

[37]  William H. Dutton,et al.  The Politics of Privacy, Confidentiality, and Ethics: Opening Research Methods , 2010, World Wide Research.

[38]  Bernie Hogan,et al.  Analysing Social Networks Via the Internet , 2007 .

[39]  Steve Woolgar,et al.  Five rules of virtuality , 2002 .

[40]  Calton Pu,et al.  Large Online Social Footprints--An Emerging Threat , 2009, 2009 International Conference on Computational Science and Engineering.