Did you know researchers are reading and analyzing your tweets and Facebook posts in the name of science?
If so, how do you feel about it? If you feel unsettled, what would make you feel better?
What鈥檚 legal and what鈥檚 not in the age of big-data research? And even if it is legal, is it ethical?
These are some of the questions Casey Fiesler, an assistant professor in the Department of Information Science at CU Boulder, will explore as part of a multicenter, $3 million National Science Foundation grant announced this month.
The four-year, six-institution听听(Pervasive Data Ethics for Computational Research) project aims to come up with guidance for researchers, policymakers and consumers around a burgeoning and at times controversial field so new it lacks widely accepted ethical standards.
鈥淭hanks to the internet we now have this vast amount of information about human behavior that can help us answer very important questions,鈥 says Fiesler, noting researchers mine everything from tweets to Instagram photos to publicly shared health data and comments on news articles. 鈥淭his is great for science, but we have to make sure that the ways we go about answering these questions are ethical and take into account the privacy and ownership concerns of the people creating the data.鈥
Fiesler received more than $400,000 which she will use to assess user knowledge and perceptions of big-data research and its legal and ethical implications.
鈥淎s technology changes, ethical norms have to constantly evolve to keep up,鈥 she says. 鈥淛ust because data is easy to get doesn鈥檛 mean we should do whatever we like with it.鈥