[Name Withheld]: Anonymity and Its Implications
(2006) [Name Withheld]: Anonymity and Its Implications. In Grove, Andrew, Eds. Proceedings 69th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIST) 43, Austin (US).
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Abstract
Anonymity allows the individual to have a voice without having a name. Since the word “anonymous” entered the English language with the advent of the printing press, the implications of being anonymous - and its lexical offspring
“anonymity” - have shifted with time, place, and circumstance. What are the perceived effects of being anonymous/anonymity on the individual and on society? In this paper, I will explore some of the shifting
meanings and implications of this concept, first as it relates to authorship, then (as it came to be viewed) as a signature condition of modern life. The perceived effect of
anonymity on the social good includes promoting freedom of expression, enabling the free flow of information, enhancing therapeutic disinhibition, and fostering an atmosphere where ideas are judged on merit. Negative consequences include lack of accountability and credibility, nondisclosure, and
deindividuation. The requirements for maintaining anonymity and pseudonymity are discussed and anonymity on the Internet. Finally, I will explore how anonymity/pseudonymity has come to be seen as a key way to protect privacy in
an era of ubiquitous surveillance technologies and to promote free expression in cyberspace.
| Keywords: | privacy ; cyberspace ; Internet |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | E. Publishing and legal issues. > EE. Intellectual freedom. A. Theoretical and general aspects of libraries and information. |
| ID Code: | 8376 |
| Deposited By: | Medeiros, Norm |
| Deposited On: | 05 January 2007 |
| All fields: | Show all fields |
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