Full Description
Legal and Ethical Issues of Live Streaming explores the potential legal and ethical issues of using live streaming technology, citing that although live streaming has a broadcasting capability, it is not regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, unlike other broadcasting media such as radio or television. Without this regulation, live streaming is opened up for broad use and misuse, including broadcasts of horrifying incidents such as the mass shootings at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand in 2019, sparking outrage and fear about the technology. Contributors provide a pathway to move forward with ethical and legal use of live streaming by analyzing the wide spectrum of critical issues through the lens of communication, ethics, and law. Scholars of legal studies, ethics, communication, and media studies will find this book particularly useful.
Contents
Introduction: The Sacredness of Life as Protonorm
Clifford G. Christians
The Dark Side of Watching: Theoretical and Ethical Challenges of Live Streamed Suicides
Matt Corr and Tim Michaels
Are We All Journalists Now?: Professional Ideology and the Legal and Ethical Implications of Live Streaming
Wendy M. Weinhold
The History of Liveness and Mass Shootings: Adapting to Social Media
Chelsea Daggett
Research Ethics of Livestream Data
Nicolas M. Legewie and Anne Nassauer
Fixed? The Law of Live-Streaming
Brian N. Larson and Genelle I. Belmas
You Can Doesn't Mean You Should: The Rationale and Ethics of Live Streaming Crimes
Melissa L. Beall, Shing-Ling S. Chen, and Laura Terlip
Watch at Your Own Risk: Trauma and Live Stream Viewing
Melissa L. Beall, Shing-Ling S. Chen, and Laura Terlip About the Authors