Fixed or fluid?: document stability and new media
ECHT '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM European conference on Hypermedia technology
Why we twitter: understanding microblogging usage and communities
Proceedings of the 9th WebKDD and 1st SNA-KDD 2007 workshop on Web mining and social network analysis
Crowdsourcing user studies with Mechanical Turk
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Proceedings of the 2010 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Opinion space: a scalable tool for browsing online comments
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
Do i do what i say?: observed versus stated privacy preferences
INTERACT'07 Proceedings of the 11th IFIP TC 13 international conference on Human-computer interaction
Analyzing the Amazon Mechanical Turk marketplace
XRDS: Crossroads, The ACM Magazine for Students - Comp-YOU-Ter
Social media ownership: using twitter as a window onto current attitudes and beliefs
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The ownership and reuse of visual media
Proceedings of the 11th annual international ACM/IEEE joint conference on Digital libraries
Attitudes toward online availability of US public records
Proceedings of the 12th Annual International Digital Government Research Conference: Digital Government Innovation in Challenging Times
International Journal of Web Based Communities
Lost in translation: understanding the possession of digital things in the cloud
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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
Archiving the relaxed consistency web
Proceedings of the 22nd ACM international conference on Conference on information & knowledge management
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Social media records the thoughts and activities of countless cultures and subcultures around the globe. Yet institutional efforts to archive social media content remain controversial. We report on 988 responses across six surveys of social media users that included questions to explore this controversy. The quantitative and qualitative results show that the way people think about the issue depends on how personal and ephemeral they view the content to be. They use concepts such as creator privacy, content characteristics, technological capabilities, perceived legal rights, and intrinsic social good to reason about the boundaries of institutional social media archiving efforts.