Design at work: cooperative design of computer systems
Design at work: cooperative design of computer systems
Using email and WWW in a distributed participatory design project
ACM SIGGROUP Bulletin
CAVEAT Exemplar: Participatory Design in aNon-Profit Volunteer Organisation
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Participatory Design: Issues and Concerns
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Human values, ethics, and design
The human-computer interaction handbook
Participatory It Design: Designing for Business and Workplace Realities
Participatory It Design: Designing for Business and Workplace Realities
Privacy and Rationality in Individual Decision Making
IEEE Security and Privacy
The Success of Open Source
Work-Oriented Design of Computer Artifacts
Work-Oriented Design of Computer Artifacts
Motivations of contributors to Wikipedia
ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society
Dissolving boundaries: social technologies and participation in design
OZCHI '09 Proceedings of the 21st Annual Conference of the Australian Computer-Human Interaction Special Interest Group: Design: Open 24/7
Social technologies: challenges and opportunities for participation
Proceedings of the 11th Biennial Participatory Design Conference
System demonstration: a toolset for web-based peer review of scientific testimony
Proceedings of the 12th Annual International Digital Government Research Conference: Digital Government Innovation in Challenging Times
Peer to PCAST: what does open video have to do with open government?
Information Polity - Special issue on Public Engagement and Government Collaboration: Theories, Strategies and Case Studies
Proceedings of the 12th Participatory Design Conference: Research Papers - Volume 1
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We discuss the distinctive opportunities and challenges of adopting a PD approach to the development of 'Web 2.0' applications. Web-based services pose significant difficulties in interacting effectively with user groups in terms of traditional PD methods. However there are some quite popular 'peer-production' services which have been successful in overcoming such challenges and thereby offer useful insights into participatory approaches for developing applications that depend on the ongoing voluntary contributions by groups of physically dispersed individuals. These are illustrated through a reflective account of the iterative development of PIPWatch, a Firefox extension that enables web users to monitor the privacy policies and practices of the websites they visit, using data contributed by previous visitors and site privacy officers.