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Ethical and privacy considerations for research using online fandom data

Brianna Dym and Casey Fiesler

As online fandom continues to grow, so do the public data created by fan creations and interactions. With researchers and journalists regularly engaging with those data (and not always asking permission), many fans are concerned that their content might end up in front of the wrong audience, which could lead to privacy violations or even harassment from within or outside of fandom. To better understand fan perspectives on the collection and analysis of public data as a methodology, we conducted both an interview study and a survey to solicit responses that would help provide a broader understanding of fandom’s privacy norms as they relate to the ethical use of data. We use these findings to revisit and recommend best practices for working with public data within fandom.

Dym, B. & Fiesler, C. (2020). Ethical and privacy considerations for research using online fandom data. Transformative Works and Cultures, 33. https://doi.org/10.3983/twc.2020.1733

Contributor: Chelcie Juliet Rowell, Harvard University Library; co-convener of the ACRL Privacy Literacy Discussion Group and co-principal investigator of the National Forum on the Prevention of Cyber Sexual Abuse.

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