Portholes: supporting awareness in a distributed work group
CHI '92 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Crowdsourcing user studies with Mechanical Turk
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Moving beyond untagging: photo privacy in a tagged world
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Are your participants gaming the system?: screening mechanical turk workers
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Privacy issues for online personal photograph collections
Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
Social media ownership: using twitter as a window onto current attitudes and beliefs
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
On saliency, affect and focused attention
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Video as memorabilia: user needs for collaborative automatic mobile video production
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
On the institutional archiving of social media
Proceedings of the 12th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital Libraries
Pinterest: social collecting for #linking #using #sharing
Proceedings of the 12th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital Libraries
Quality through flow and immersion: gamifying crowdsourced relevance assessments
SIGIR '12 Proceedings of the 35th international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Supporting a sense of connectedness: meaningful things in the lives of new university students
Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Implementing crowdsourcing-based relevance experimentation: an industrial perspective
Information Retrieval
Are user-contributed reviews community property?: exploring the beliefs and practices of reviewers
Proceedings of the 5th Annual ACM Web Science Conference
Experiences surveying the crowd: reflections on methods, participation, and reliability
Proceedings of the 5th Annual ACM Web Science Conference
Rethinking the web as a personal archive
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web
Saving, reusing, and remixing web video: using attitudes and practices to reveal social norms
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web
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This paper presents the results of a study of the ownership and reuse of visual media. A survey was administered to 250 social media-savvy respondents to investigate their attitudes about saving, sharing, publishing, and removing online photos; the survey also explored participants' current photo-sharing and reuse practices, and their general expectations of photo reuse. Our probe of respondent attitudes revealed that respondents felt: (1) people should be able to save visual media, regardless of its source; (2) people have slightly less right to reuse photos than they do to save them; (3) a photo's subject has a slightly greater right than the photographer to reuse the photo in non-commercial situations; (4) removal is controversial, but trends more positive when it involves only metadata (e.g. tags); and (5) access to institutional archives of personal photos is better deferred for 50 years. Participants explained their own reuse of online photos in pragmatic terms that included the nature of the content, the aim and circumstances of reuse, their sense of the photo's original use, and their understanding of existing laws and restrictions. In the abstract, the same general question revealed a 'reuse paradox'; while respondents trust themselves to make this judgment, they do not trust the reciprocal judgment of unknown others.