Google Docs are not new to me so I'm back on more familiar grounds here, although I'd not shared a document before. Google Docs on the whole are very straightforward, convenient tool for storing documents on the Internet rather than on a hard drive.
My main concern, as mentioned when blogging about Thing 1 a little while ago, stems from questions teased out by Prof. Lilian Edwards during her Arcadia seminar talk regarding privacy settings and ultimate ownership of any documents housed on a Web 2.0 platform: can we really trust that Google does not take a peak at them (spy?)? I don't believe that. And what happens more specifically in the case of confidential documents? Or when someones dies, which was the basis of Prof. Edwards' talk?
All in all, I'll carry on using Google Docs as a convenient emergency measure but wouldn't be happy to use it for sensitive documents, despite the ease with which it allows us to share working documents with colleagues.
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Monday, 30 August 2010
Monday, 2 August 2010
Thing 1 - Setting up a Google ID
Well. There we go then. The pressure's on... now that I have finally registered my empty blog and therefore am officially registered with the Cambridge 23 Things programme, I "only" have 10 weeks' worth of Web 2.0 discoveries to catch up on and blog about. Better get going!
Thing 1 itself was a bit of a cheat for me, since I already have a Google account as I use Gmail as my personal email. I do like it a lot although some of the comments made at Prof. Lilian Edwards' excellent Arcadia seminar on “Death 2.0: What Becomes of Digital Assets after Death?” gave me a lot of food for thought (the good old privacy issues that keep popping up, and the importance of knowing where a online company is based for legal purposes... all sorts of things I'd never actually thought about before).
Not sure yet how Google itself can have a useful, viable application in a library context - I'll be exploring this a bit more in-depth later on I imagine, and will come back to that one.
Thing 1 itself was a bit of a cheat for me, since I already have a Google account as I use Gmail as my personal email. I do like it a lot although some of the comments made at Prof. Lilian Edwards' excellent Arcadia seminar on “Death 2.0: What Becomes of Digital Assets after Death?” gave me a lot of food for thought (the good old privacy issues that keep popping up, and the importance of knowing where a online company is based for legal purposes... all sorts of things I'd never actually thought about before).
Not sure yet how Google itself can have a useful, viable application in a library context - I'll be exploring this a bit more in-depth later on I imagine, and will come back to that one.
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