Ethical considerations in an online community: the balancing act |
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Authors: | Cecile Paris Nathalie Colineau Surya Nepal Sanat Kumar Bista Gina Beschorner |
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Institution: | 1. ICT Centre, CSIRO, Cnr Pembroke and Vimiera Rds, Marsfield, NSW, 2122, Australia 2. ICT Centre, CSIRO, ANU Campus, North Rd, Canberra, Australia 3. Department of Human Services, Communication Division, 57 Athllon Drive, Greenway, ACT, 2900, Australia
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Abstract: | With the emergence and rapid growth of Social Media, a number of government departments in several countries have embraced Social Media as a privilege channel to interact with their constituency. We are exploring, in collaboration with the Australian Department of Human Services, the possibility to exploit the potential of social networks to support specific groups of citizens. To this end, we have developed Next Step, an online community to help people currently receiving welfare payments find a job and become financially self-sufficient. In this paper, we explore some ethical issues that arise when governments engage directly with citizens, in particular with communities in difficult situations, and when researchers are involved. We describe some of the challenges we faced and how we addressed them. Our work highlights the complexity of the problem, when an online community involves a government department and a welfare recipient group with a dependency relationship with that department. It becomes a balancing act, with the need to ensure privacy of the community members whilst still fulfilling the government’s legal responsibilities. While difficult, these issues must be addressed if governments are to engage with their citizens using Social Media. |
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