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privacy

Explainer: Reporting on children

‘Sandy Hook’ renewed the privacy versus public interest debate that surrounds reporting on children, Sheridan Lee explains.

Does Bieber deserve privacy?

The recent nude images of Justin Bieber raise questions about celebrities’ right to privacy, writes Ethan Miller.

Explainer: Reporting on children

‘Sandy Hook’ renewed the privacy versus public interest debate that surrounds reporting on children, Sheridan Lee explains.

Does Bieber deserve privacy?

The recent nude images of Justin Bieber raise questions about celebrities’ right to privacy, writes Ethan Miller.

more from privacy

Explainer: Reporting on children

‘Sandy Hook’ renewed the privacy versus public interest debate that surrounds reporting on children, Sheridan Lee explains.

Does Bieber deserve privacy?

The recent nude images of Justin Bieber raise questions about celebrities’ right to privacy, writes Ethan Miller.

Do you agree to the conditions?

Spotify’s changes to its privacy policy has highlighted the need for greater transparency by online companies, writes Ethan Miller.

Drones threaten citizen privacy

Major growth in the use of drones has prompted calls to reconsider laws that protect citizen privacy, writes Erica Jolly.

Feeding the social media machine

The threat of companies tracking your online behaviour and selling that information to marketers is becoming dangerous, writes Kieran Balmaceda.

The name and shame game

Matt Calvitto discusses the difference between commenting and trolling, and who’s responsible when social media turns ugly.

Cropping history

Are you happy to be photographed in the name of art or history? Jyade Old explores the context of public photography.

Google plus Facebook: cover your privates

We’re a technologically savvy lot, but the growth of social networking sites may not provide us with a Web 2.0 utopia. Renee Tibbs listens in on our private business.

Social media: a journalist’s friend or foe?

As the social media frenzy continues unabated, are journalists leaning too heavily on online sources? Giulio Di Giorgio chats with veteran public affairs educator and consultant Don Bates to find out.

Privacy in the age of insecurity

David Brin once asked “Who Will Watch the Watchers?” It’s a question well worth asking, says Associate professor at the Missouri School of Journalism and the executive director for the National Freedom of Information Coalition, (NFOIC), Charles N Davis. The question has never been more pressing than in the present era, in which governments have become ever-more blatant in their quest to manage and massage information.