Thanks Jessica! I'm already in touch with them.
Best,
Anders
Med vänliga hälsningar,
Anders Thoresson
Frilansjournalist
0521-57 00 01 (fast och mobil)
[email protected]
http://anders.thoresson.se
http://www.dn.se/blogg/teknikbloggen
http://twitter.com/thoresson
On 17 Dec 2013, at 22:56, Jessica L. Beyer wrote:
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 <https://twitter.com/jlbeyer>
<http://www.beyergyre.com/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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