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MIT Media Lab blog survey

MIT Media Lab's Fernanda Viegas conducted blogging survey with the goal "to determine the expectations of privacy and accountability that authors have when they blog".The results are in:- 55% of respondents provide their real names on their blogs; another 20% provide some variant of the real name- 76% of bloggers do not limit access (i.
Written by ZDNET Editors, Contributor

MIT Media Lab's Fernanda Viegas conducted blogging survey with the goal "to determine the expectations of privacy and accountability that authors have when they blog".

The results are in:

- 55% of respondents provide their real names on their blogs; another 20% provide some variant of the real name

- 76% of bloggers do not limit access (i.e. readership) to their entries in any way

- 36% of respondents have gotten in trouble because of things they have written on their blogs

- 34% of respondents know other bloggers who have gotten in trouble with family and friends

- 12% of respondents know other bloggers who have gotten in legal or professional problems because of things they wrote on their blogs

- when blogging about people they know personally: 66% of respondents almost never asked permission to do so; whereas, only 9% said they never blogged about people they knew personally.

- 83% of respondents characterized their entries as personal ramblings whereas 20% said they mostly publish lists of useful/interesting links (respondents could check multiple options for this answer).

- the frequency with which a blogger writes highly personal things is positively and significantly correlated to how often they get in trouble because of their postings; generally speaking, people have gotten in trouble both with friends and family as well as employers.

- there is no correlation between how often a blogger writes about highly personal things and how concerned they are about the persistence of their entries

- checking one

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