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Flanders, Bruce – American Libraries, 1991
Discusses issues involved in the creation of the National Research and Education Network (NREN). Telecommunications technology is described; support from industry and libraries is discussed; and problems with NREN are raised, including equal access to computerized information, privacy issues, and protection of First Amendment rights. (LRW)
Descriptors: Access to Information, Computer Networks, Library Networks, Privacy
Peer reviewedVoakes, Paul S. – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1998
Contributes to scholarship on journalism law and journalism ethics by probing 42 journalists' decision-making processes in news gathering situations that resulted in lawsuits for invasion of privacy. Indicates that journalists were generally unaware of impending legal trouble; and that legal reasoning takes place in a "total context" of social…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Ethics, Higher Education, Journalism
Peer reviewedFerris, Lori E. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2000
Focuses on ethical and legal issues that arose in the evaluation of abortion services. Discusses the development of decision rules and tradeoffs in dealing with these issues to reach rational and objective decisions. Places the discussion in the context of balancing usefulness and propriety with respect to informed consent and privacy and makes…
Descriptors: Abortions, Decision Making, Ethics, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedSamoriski, Jan H.; And Others – Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1996
Attempts to clarify the status of e-mail privacy under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (ECPA). Examines current law and the paucity of definitive case law. A review of cases and literature suggests there is a gap in the existing ECPA that allows for potentially abusive electronic monitoring and interception of e-mail,…
Descriptors: Computer Security, Electronic Mail, Information Policy, Laws
Peer reviewedAidman, Amy – Educational Leadership, 2000
The first federal Internet privacy law (the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act) provides safeguards for children by regulating collection of their personal information. Unfortunately, teens are not protected. Legislation is pending to protect children from online marketers such as ZapMe! Interactive technologies require constant vigilance.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, Internet, Privacy
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2002
Discusses Oklahoma case ("Owasso Independent School District No. 1-001 v. Falvo") wherein the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in February 2002 that peer grading did not violate the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). (PKP)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Grading, Privacy
Peer reviewedFarah, Badie N.; Higby, Mary A. – Journal of Education for Business, 2001
Electronic commerce has intensified conflict between businesses' need to collect data and customers' desire to protect privacy. Web-based privacy tools and legislation could add to the costs of e-commerce and reduce profitability. Business models not based on profiling customers may be needed. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Responsibility, Data Collection, Federal Regulation, Privacy
Peer reviewedDeal, Walter F., III – Technology Teacher, 2004
Radio frequency identification, or RFID, is a generic term for technologies that use radio waves to automatically identify people or objects. There are several methods of identification, but the most common is to store a serial number that identifies a person or object, and perhaps other information, on a microchip that is attached to an antenna…
Descriptors: Identification, Telecommunications, Technological Advancement, Privacy
McCarthy, Martha M. – Educational Horizons, 2004
Accompanying the explosive growth of the Internet have been concerns about protecting children from viewing pornographic and other harmful images through cyberspace. In the past few years, Congress has passed several acts to censor Internet sites available to children, but only the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) has received Supreme…
Descriptors: Libraries, Internet, Federal Legislation, Pornography
Moriya, Dafna – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2006
School art therapists face numerous ethical dilemmas, from referrals to therapy, through privacy, safety and predictability in the art therapy room, to the need to balance cooperation with the educational staff and its expectations of shared information with loyalty to the patient. Breach of confidentiality also has legal implications. The…
Descriptors: Confidentiality, Art Therapy, Ethics, Privacy
Bernstein, Joan E. – Computers in Libraries, 2007
In this article, the author recounts her experience in 2005 as a library director at the Mount Laurel Library in New Jersey. She thought her people at the library were in fairly good shape in terms of the professional staff's understanding of the confidentiality rules governing their customer information. However, she was wrong. This was driven…
Descriptors: Professional Personnel, Confidentiality, Library Personnel, Library Administration
Kranich, Nancy – Knowledge Quest, 2007
Teenagers will freely give up personal information to join social networks on the Internet. However, a 2007 study by the Pew Internet and American Life project found that most of the 55 percent of teens who place their personal profiles online take steps to protect themselves from the most obvious areas of risk. Parents, teachers, and librarians…
Descriptors: Risk, Social Networks, Internet, Librarians
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs. – 1986
Submitted to Congress by Senator William V. Roth, Jr., of the Committee on Governmental Affairs, this document reports favorably on Senate Bill 786 (the Information Age Commission Act of 1986), legislation designed to establish a commission to study the impact of computer and communications systems on American society. The report provides: (1) a…
Descriptors: Communications, Computers, Costs, Federal Legislation
Larson, Jeffry H.; Bell, Nancy J. – 1983
Little is known about the implications of individual differences in privacy preferences. To explore the relationship between privacy preferences and the style and quality of social interaction in a first encounter, 77 of 320 college students completing the Privacy Preference Scale were grouped according to their low (20 male, 20 female) or high…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Individual Differences, Interaction
Werner, Carol; Haggard, Lois – 1984
The findings from a study of 42 administrators in a large metropolitan school district supported the hypothesis that the use of privacy regulation mechanisms is deliberate and dynamic. The researchers considered the age and sex of the administrators, the length of time they'd held their current jobs, their tendencies toward Type A or Type B…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Administrators, Coping, Hypertension

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