Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/107422
Title: Do Not Harm in Private Chat Apps: Ethical Issues for Research on and with WhatsApp
Authors: Barbosa, Sérgio 
Milan, Stefania
Keywords: chat apps; WhatsApp; Signal; Telegram; digital activism; digital ethnography; research ethics; engaged research
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: University of Westminster Press
Project: European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No 639379 – DATACTIVE, awarded to Stefania Milan as Principal Investigator 
Serial title, monograph or event: Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture
Volume: 14
Issue: 1
Abstract: WhatsApp has remained under the radar for it is scarcely accessible to overt scholarly scrutiny. Encrypted chat apps allow for a certain degree of perceived secrecy. Yet the high frequency of civic engagement makes ethnographic research a time-consuming exercise. This article investigates how digital ethnography inside WhatsApp groups requires up-to-date, innovative ethical guidelines. We suggest a two-pronged approach. On the one hand, we should rethink and update ‘known’ ways of doing ethics, undertaking at least three conceptual operations: going back to the basics, positing as central the notion of ‘do not harm’, which allows to re-centre the user within the research process; avoid reducing research ethics to a one-stop checklist, to privilege instead a recursive, iterative and dialogic process able to engage research subjects; moving past the consent form as the sole and merely regulatory moment of the researcher-research subject relationship. On the other hand, while thinking through innovative ways of considering ethics in chat app research, we ought to take infrastructure seriously, both the site of research and the research ecosystem; embrace transparency and avoid by all means covert bypasses; and guarantee full anonymisation to our research subjects.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/107422
ISSN: 1744-6716
DOI: 10.16997/wpcc.313
Rights: openAccess
Appears in Collections:I&D CES - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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