Thank you for your most kind words, Jessica. :)

--
Marcin de Kaminski
PhDc Sociology of Law, University of Lund
Lund University Internet Institute, Cybernorms Research Group
Personal homepage - www.dekaminski.se

Phone#: +46-(0)768 04 51 51

(Sent frpm my iPhbne.)

> 17 dec 2013 kl. 22:56 skrev "Jessica L. Beyer" <[email protected]>:
> 
> Dear Anders,
> 
> You might look to the world of filesharing, e.g. the implementation of IPRED 
> in Sweden (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7978853.stm). Måns Svensson and Stefan 
> Larsson at Lund University have done some fantastic work on filesharing that 
> have empirical findings related to surveillance.  For instance, they have a 
> 2012 New Media and Society piece titled "Intellectual property law compliance 
> in Europe: Illegal file sharing and the role of social norms" that looks at 
> the implementation of IPRED. The piece is focused on the issue of social 
> norms, but as a side finding shows changes in behavior. They have other work 
> in this area as well - see the Cybernorms working group, 
> http://cybernormer.se/about-us/
> 
> I know the legality issues are different - but the underlying questions about 
> what people do when they think they are being watched could be helpful.
> 
> Best,
> Jessica
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Dr. Jessica L. Beyer, @jlbeyer
> http://www.beyergyre.com/jlbeyer/
> University of Washington
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> 
>> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 4:54 AM, Anders Thoresson <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>> I'm a swedish freelance reporter. Presently, I'm doing research for an 
>> article about how surveillance changes the behavior of the citizens. What my 
>> editor want my story to answer is essence one question, but a large one: 
>> "How does mass-surveillance like what's exposed by Edward Snowden change how 
>> people use the Internet?"
>> 
>> Finding theoretical discussions isn't hard. What I'm trying to find is 
>> recent research that is based on real-life observations (or similar) how 
>> this actually happens. The PEN America's report is one good example[1], but 
>> I would also like to have research based on a wider demography, not well 
>> known authors and journalists.
>> 
>> I understand that there hasn't gone long enough to do actual studies based 
>> on what has happened since Snowden's leaks, so what I'm looking for is 
>> studies that look into other kinds of online surveillance.
>> 
>> I'm thankful for any pointers.
>> 
>> [1] – http://www.pen.org/chilling-effects
>> 
>> Best regards,
>> Anders Thoresson
>> http://anders.thoresson.se
>> http://www.dn.se/blogg/teknikbloggen
>> http://twitter.com/thoresson
>> -- 
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