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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Here's Looking At You, Selfie, Mark Y. Herring
Here's Looking At You, Selfie, Mark Y. Herring
Dacus Library Faculty Publications
By the time you read this column this story may have lost all it relevance but it has made a bit of a dust up lately and so I think it deserves some further treatment. About two weeks ago, the cyberverse was all a twitter about naked selfies, mainly of celebrities, that had been hacked right out of the cloud. Imagine that. What goes online isn’t exactly private. Doh!
Digitizing Murder: Content And Platform Considerations, Rebecca Mattson, Susan Altmeyer, Elizabeth Farrell
Digitizing Murder: Content And Platform Considerations, Rebecca Mattson, Susan Altmeyer, Elizabeth Farrell
Law Library Faculty Works
No abstract provided.
Privacy, Restriction, And Access: Legal And Ethical Dilemmas, Camila Z. Tessler
Privacy, Restriction, And Access: Legal And Ethical Dilemmas, Camila Z. Tessler
School of Information Student Research Journal
This paper examines the intersection of privacy and access in archival repositories. Archival repositories are well known for containing restricted material, and for protecting the privacy of the donors. This literature review examines the need for restricted material from both legal and ethical standpoints, as well as discussing culturally sensitive materials while determining what archives and libraries can do to protect both themselves and their donors while enhancing accessibility and freedom of information.
Library Patron Privacy In 2014 - Honoring The Legacy Of Zoia Horn, Sarah Lamdan
Library Patron Privacy In 2014 - Honoring The Legacy Of Zoia Horn, Sarah Lamdan
Publications and Research
No abstract provided.
The Unc Law Library's Redaction Of Its Digitized Collection Of North Carolina Supreme Court Briefs: A Case Study, Nicole Downing
The Unc Law Library's Redaction Of Its Digitized Collection Of North Carolina Supreme Court Briefs: A Case Study, Nicole Downing
AALL/LexisNexis Call for Papers
This study evaluates the digital redaction process as undertaken by the University of North Carolina Kathrine R. Everett Law Library as part of digitizing their collection of North Carolina Supreme Court briefs. New privacy concerns are raised by digitizing court documents and making them available online. Libraries have an interest in digitizing their print collections of court documents for public access on the Internet, but have received no clear guidance on how to proceed in the face of legal concerns. The purpose of this research is to inform libraries of the legal, ethical, and practical situation surrounding redaction of digitized …