Some thoughts on why you would like to share Twitter datasets… and other data.
Some thoughts on why you would like to share Twitter datasets… and other data.
The Impact Blog of the London School of Economics and Political Science has published today my post from yesterday (“Twitter as Public Evidence and the Ethics of Twitter Research”) under the title Publicly available data from Twitter is public evidence and does not constitute an “ethical dilemma”.
Originally posted on ACLAIIR: Join us in Cambridge for the ACLAIIR AGM & Seminar 2014, the topic of which is Open Access. We are pleased to welcome speakers from a variety of areas to give their perspectives on OA and its impact on the world of research, teaching and publishing.
Scientific American asks: “Is the use of Twitter as a research tool ethical, given that its users do not intend to contribute to research?” I say: yes.
He compartido un archivo que contiene 2012 tweets marcados con #2EHD entre el 13/05/2014 a las 18:14:42 y el 25/05/2014 a las 20:35:42 hora del DF.
Where I share the results of a quick text analysis of a small corpora of recent tweets from @BBCPolitics and @bbcnickrobinson. I also shared the corpora on fighsare.
An update linking to two of my outputs from the Higher Education Academy’s Digital Humanities Summit (7-8 May 2014, Lewes, UK).
Photos from the ideas jotted down by participants of the Higher Education Academy’s Digital Humanities Summit, 7-8 May 2014, Lewes, UK, during the “Narrowing the Focus” session on 8 May 2014.
I have published a new article: Comics Unmasked: A Conversation with Adrian Edwards, lead curator of Printed Historical Sources, The British Library.
Like last year, I attempted to archive the tweets tagged with the HASTAC annual conference’s official hashtag (this year #HASTAC2014). I have shared the resulting dataset on figshare.