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Christy Tucker's Library tagged privacy   View Popular

04 Apr 09

Educational Technology and Life » Blog Archive » Google Docs Does Not Violate CIPA (or COPPA*)

Google Docs and legal issues--good reading for US teachers who want to use Google Docs with their students, especially those with students younger than 14

edtechlife.com/?p=2236 - Preview

google education k-12 privacy

27 Feb 09

10 Privacy Settings Every Facebook User Should Know

If you're using Facebook, especially if you use it with multiple groups of people (friends, family, professional contacts, bloggers), friend lists are highly recommended. This is also a good article to pass along to people who are resistant. To some extent, I figure all the privacy is illusory; people can still share what they know, after all. But it's at least some protection.

www.allfacebook.com/...facebook-privacy - Preview

facebook privacy

18 Aug 08

FERPAPoint2005.pdf (application/pdf Object)

FERPA guidelines for online education, include what laws apply and what don't

www.ion.illinois.edu/...FERPAPoint2005.pdf - Preview

ferpa privacy e-learning education highered k-12

Welcome to AACRAO's Online FERPA Guide

FERPA guide for higher ed, with more detailed explanations of what constitutes directory information vs. personally identifiable information. According to this, email addresses are OK to disclose, which isn't what I was previously told.

www.aacrao.org/...main_frameset.html - Preview

ferpa privacy education highered

12 Aug 08

The Bamboo Project Blog: Privacy, Social Media and Learning

Businesses and organizations may worry about social media and Web 2.0 tools in terms of privacy and confidentiality, but their fears are largely unfounded. If people are going to share your secrets, they have plenty of other ways to do so besides social media--and those other ways are likely more effective.

michelemartin.typepad.com/...privacy-social.html - Preview

web2.0 orgculture privacy

  • Social media is actually a really poor method for talking about things I shouldn't be discussing because through search and the very nature of social networks, it makes it extremely unlikely that I can keep this activity a secret for very long. 
  • Consider what would happen, though, if we turned to social media for the majority of our interactions within an organization. If we're posting questions and answers on a blog or wiki, using social networks to interact and share information, as a learning professional I can monitor those channels to see where additional learning interventions might be appropriate.Not as a punishment, mind you, but as a sort of ongoing just-in-time learning needs analysis and opportunity for coaching. If a lot of questions suddenly start popping up on the network, that's a pretty good sign that as a learning professional I may need to do something.
29 Mar 08

Ideas and Thoughts from an EdTech » Blog Archive » Diigo you have given me a headache

Negative post about Diigo, specifically that new users are apparently asked to import contacts and can end up sending spam to everyone they know.

ideasandthoughts.org/...o-you-have-given-me-a-headache - Preview

privacy socialbookmarking

17 Dec 07

Study: Googling Oneself Is More Popular -- chicagotribune.com

Interesting stats on looking up yourself, friends, and others through search engines. Most people say they aren't concerned about the information available about them online and that it is accurate. The low number of people reporting negative experiences from online information was a surprise to me--the fears about transparency don't seem to be backed up with data.

www.chicagotribune.com/...ternet-searches,1,230402.story - Preview

identity privacy search transparency

  • Few Internet users say they Google themselves regularly -- about three-quarters of self-searchers say they have done so only once or twice. And most who have done so consider what they find accurate. Only 4 percent of Internet users said embarrassing or inaccurate information online resulted in a bad experience.
09 Nov 07

Blogging Parent Letter and Consent Form | Beyond School

  • Letter to parents introducing blogging as "connective reading and writing." Talks about benefits of blogging and about student judgment in privacy settings. Rather than dictating what students will do, there's room for individual differences.
    - christyinsdesign on 2007-11-09

Students tell universities: Get out of MySpace! | Students | EducationGuardian.co.uk

  • Student reactions to universities using social networking tooks like MySpace and Facebook as learning mediums. In general, they don't want the tools used for formal learning; they want to keep some separation between their personal and school lives. However, students also like using the communication tools for more informal purposes, like getting to know their professors or for instant tutoring.
    - christyinsdesign on 2007-11-09
  • Online spaces are blurring, as universities that podcast and text their students have shown. The Jisc project manager, Lawrie Phipps, explains how the battle lines are being drawn: "Students really do want to keep their lives separate. They don't want to be always available to their lecturers or bombarded with academic information."
17 Aug 07

» Has Facebook abandoned privacy? | The Social Web | ZDNet.com

  • Summary of some non-obvious RSS feeds of Facebook data publicly available, with some potential privacy concerns.
    - christyinsdesign on 2007-08-17
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