You have no pernission to quote from any of my emails as they are private
correspondence, not a jot may you quote without express permission.
There is a matter of more than law in this, there is respect and courtesy.
As for web sites, I would regard it as a public service if one makes a copy
of a web site one quotes as that is ephemeral and may not be there for
future readers of your paper. What you should do is consider making a print
copy available to copyright library if the website subsequently goes down.
That way propriety is preserved.
Larry
> -----Original Message-----
> From: The Disability-Research Discussion List
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Mairian
> Scott-Hill
> Sent: 23 October 2002 16:27
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Internet research
>
>
> Can anyone out there provide some answers to the following questions in
> relation to Internet research:
>
> 1. I'm aware of the current (UK?) guidelines in relation to seeking
> permissions to cite extracts from printed works i.e. that you only have to
> ask for permission to cite from the publisher if a single extract is more
> than a certain number of words or if a number of extracts from
> the same text
> exceed a certain number of words. Otherwise it is sufficient to
> indicate and
> reference where the cite came from. What I want to know is
> whether (a) email
> archives and (b) chat rooms constitute a single text or multiple texts?
>
> 2. What do list participants feel about the ethical dimensions of
> 'lurking'
> for the sole purpose of carrying out research? Is researcher anonymity
> sometimes helpful in allowing email discussion to proceed
> 'naturally' or can
> their virtual presence and transparency enhance the research in
> other ways?
> Can lurking sometimes amount to surveillance? Does lurking go against the
> stated aims of 'emancipatory' disability research in relation to
> researcher
> transparency and full participation of disabled people? Does it
> represent a
> risk to list participants and/or to disabled people (including children)?
> Would the answers be the same for any kind of list?
>
>
>
> Many thanks
>
>
> Mairian
>
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