The Facebook Conundrum

17
The Facebook Conundrum An Ethics Case Study by Gerald, Christina, Gwen & Deni

description

The Facebook Conundrum. An Ethics Case Study by Gerald, Christina, Gwen & Deni. Background Info - Independent. Founded by Paul Bass in 2005 Online, hyperlocal , non-profit news organization Covered news in New Haven, Connecticut Technology to revive traditional journalism. Paul Bass . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Facebook Conundrum

Page 1: The Facebook Conundrum

The Facebook ConundrumAn Ethics Case Study by Gerald, Christina, Gwen & Deni

Page 2: The Facebook Conundrum

Background Info - IndependentFounded by Paul Bass in 2005

Online, hyperlocal, non-profit news organization

Covered news in New Haven, Connecticut

Technology to revive traditional journalism

Paul Bass

Page 3: The Facebook Conundrum

The MurderOn September 8, 2009, Yale doctorial candidate Annie Le went

missing.

As the national media soon descended upon New Haven over the next few days, Independent realized the impact of the story

Because of their sources and familiarity with the community, they soon emerged at the forefront in the coverage

On September 13, the day Le was supposed to get married, her body was found inside the walls of the Yale lab

Annie Le

Page 4: The Facebook Conundrum

Timeliness vs. EthicsIndependent had the inside scoop when the police

gave them the name of their chief suspect, Raymond Clark

However, Bass decided not to release his name, even though they had the drop on all the other news organizations

Raymond Clark

Page 5: The Facebook Conundrum

Discussion #1Should Independent have released Clark’s name when

they got it or did they do the right thing in allowing other news organizations to identify him first?

Is there any validity to Independent’s stance that, “We don’t want to be known as the paper that ruined someone’s reputation”?

Page 6: The Facebook Conundrum

The Plot ThickensThe story continued to heat up as Melissa Bailey

discovered a blog post written by Clark’s fiancée on Myspace.

Since it was not private, it was public information that anyone with a computer could see

Bailey chose not to use the woman’s name or photo

Melissa Bailey

Page 7: The Facebook Conundrum

Discussion #2Was Bailey right to use any information found on the

public Myspace blog?

Was she overly cautious in not identifying the woman or was it necessary in minimizing harm?

Page 8: The Facebook Conundrum

The Ex-Girlfriend Marcia Chambers, an Independent reporter stationed in Branford, Connecticut

(where Clark was from), started looking into his history before the other organizations even got his name

She discovered a police record from 2003 filed by Jessica Del Rocco, Clark’s high school girlfriend

The report said Clark confronted her and Del Rocco said he had forced her into having sex

Independent went public with the story after Clark was identified by other news outlets, but did not identify Del Rocco until she went public a week later

Page 9: The Facebook Conundrum

On to FacebookBailey friend requested Del Rocco and gained access to all her

status updates after Del Rocco accepted

Bailey had not identified herself as a reporter yet

Del Rocco had known her ex-boyfriend was a suspect since a few days before and had posted a status about the news that Independent saw as newsworthy color.

Jessica Del Rocco

Page 10: The Facebook Conundrum

Del Rocco’s Status:“I feel like I’m sixteen all over again. It’s just [sic]

bringing back everything. It’s been a rough few days.”

She also wrote that she was “in total and utter shock” and that she “couldn’t believe this is true.”

Page 11: The Facebook Conundrum

The Dilemma Bailey asked Del Rocco via Facebook for an interview and identified herself

as a reporter.

Del Rocco declined the interview, but did not delete Bailey as a friend.

Bailey and Bass were torn between whether they could ethically use Del Rocco’s status in a story.

On the one hand, Del Rocco had given Bailey access to that status update. But on the other, she had declined an interview and there’s a difference between right to access and the right to publish

Page 12: The Facebook Conundrum

Discussion #3If Del Rocco accepted the friend request, do you

believe her status update was fair game?

Since Del Rocco declined an interview, do you believe using her status update in a story would have been unethical?

Page 13: The Facebook Conundrum

Discussion #3Would you have identified Del Rocco if her status was

used in a story?

Does the fact that Del Rocco had 350 friends change the perception that her status was “private”?

What’s the line between a right to access and the right to putting that information in a story when it comes to social media?

Page 14: The Facebook Conundrum

The DecisionBass and Bailey decided to use the status update

They did not identify Del Rocco, staying consistent with the decision to not identify her in the story about the police report from 2003

Do you believe they were justified? What would you have done differently?

Page 15: The Facebook Conundrum

Ethics Social media had not fully emerged into the monster it is today

Not many precedents to draw upon before that case other than Virginia Tech shooting in 2007 and Voinov murder in 2008

“Privacy is about intrusion rather than secrecy and the question is whether you have a reasonable explanation that something is private, rather than whether you have done or said something in public,” – Siobhan Butterworth, reader’s editor of the Guardian

Page 16: The Facebook Conundrum

Since then…We’ve come a long way with ethics in social media since then

AP says that although journalists can friend sources, they can never simply pull quotes or other material from social media without directly informing the subject

NPR has established their own social media team that attempts to verify information from online sources

Page 17: The Facebook Conundrum

Final ThoughtsWith all the knowledge we know have regarding ethics

and the culture of social media, do you think Bass and Bailey would have made the same decision today?

Would they still be justified in their decision today if it remained the same?