Applied TheoryConducting Global Internet ResearchMcCool, M. (2006). Information architecture:Intercultural human factors. Technical Communication,53, 167–183.McKee, H. A., & Porter, J. E. (2009). The ethics of Internetresearch: A rhetorical, case-based approach. New York,NY: Peter Lang.Mizutani, M., Dorsey, J., & Moor, J. H. (2004). TheInternet and Japanese conception of privacy. Ethicsand Information Technology, 6, 121–128.Nakada, M., & Tamura, T. (2005). Japanese conceptionsof privacy: An intercultural perspective. Ethics andInformation Technology, 7, 27–36.Porter, J. E. (1997). Legal realities and ethicalhyperrealities: A critical approach towardcyberwriting. In S C. Selber (Ed.), Computers andtechnical communication: Pedagogical and programmaticperspectives (pp. 45–73). Greenwich, CT: Ablex/ATTW Studies in Technical Communication.Porter, J. E. (2009). Recovering delivery for digitalrhetoric. Computers and Composition, 26, 207–224.Reichman, J. H., Dinwoodie, G. B., & Samuelson,P. (2007). Copyright, digital rights managementtechnology, and consumer protection. BerkeleyTechnology Law Journal, 22, 981–1060.Rife, M. C. (2007). Technical communicators and digitalwriting risk assessment. Technical Communication, 54,157–170.Samuelson, P. (1996, January). The copyright grab.Wired, 4(1). Retrieved from http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/4.01/white.paper.htmlSchultz, R. A. (2006). Contemporary issues in ethics andinformation technology. Hershey, PA: IRM Press.Spinuzzi, C. (2007). Guest editor’s introduction:Technical communication in the age of distributedwork. Technical Communication Quarterly, 16, 265–277.Starke-Meyerring, D. (2005). Meeting the challenges ofglobalization: A framework for global literacies inprofessional communication programs. Journal ofBusiness and Technical Communication, 19, 468–499.Starke-Meyerring, D., Duin, A. H., & Palvetzian, T.(2007). Global partnerships: Positioning technicalcommunication programs in the context ofglobalization. Technical Communication Quarterly, 16,139–174.Suhl, N. C. (2002). Moral rights protection in theUnited States under the Berne Convention: Afictional work? Fordham Intellectual Property, Media &Entertainment Law Journal, 12, 1203–1228.Sullivan, B. (2006, October 19). “La difference” is starkin EU, U.S. privacy laws. MSNBC.com. RetrievedApril 24, 2009, from http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15221111Sun, H. (2006). The triumph of users: Achievingcultural usability goals with user localization.Technical Communication Quarterly, 15, 457–481.United Nations General Assembly. (1948). The universaldeclaration of human rights. Retrieved on April 24,2009, from http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.htmlU.S. Copyright Office. (2008). U.S. Copyright Law (Title17). Retrieved from http://www.copyright.gov/title17U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. (2009). U.S.Trademark Law (Title 15). Retrieved from http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/tac/tmlaw2.htmlUzbekistan. (2007, May 9). OpenNet Initiative.Retrieved from http://opennet.net/research/profiles/uzbekistanVoss, D., & Flammia, M. (2007). Ethical andintercultural challenges for technical communicatorsand managers in a shrinking global marketplace.Technical Communication, 54, 72–87.298 Technical Communication l Volume 57, Number 3, August 2010
Applied TheoryMcKee and PorterWalton, G. (2001). China’s golden shield: Corporations andthe development of surveillance technology in the People’sRepublic of China. International Centre for HumanRights and Democratic Development. RetrievedApril 24, 2009, from http://www.dd-rd.ca/site/_PDF/publications/globalization/CGS_ENG.PDFWorld Intellectual Property Organization [WIPO].(1979). The Berne Convention for the protection of literaryand artistic works. Retrieved from http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.htmlWorld Trade Organization. (1994). Trade-related aspectsof intellectual property rights [TRIPS]. Retrieved fromhttp://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/27-trips_01_e.htmYanhai, W. (2001). Becoming a gay activist incontemporary China. Journal of Homosexuality,40(3/4), 47–64.ccdigitalpress.org). With James Porter, she co-authoredThe Ethics of Internet Research: A Rhetorical, Case-BasedProcess (2009). Contact: mckeeha@muohio.eduJames E. Porter is a professor at Miami University,with a dual appointment in English and ArmstrongInteractive Media Studies. He has served on IRBs atPurdue University and Michigan State University. Hisbooks include Audience and Rhetoric (1992), OpeningSpaces: Writing Technologies and Critical Research Practices(1997, with Patricia Sullivan), and Rhetorical Ethics andInternetworked Writing (1998). His latest book, coauthoredwith Heidi McKee, is titled The Ethics ofInternet Research: A Rhetorical, Case-Based Process (2009).Contact: porterje@muohio.eduManuscript received 1 November 2009; revised 19 February 2010;accepted 19 March 2010.Yu, P. K. (2007a). International enclosure, the regimecomplex, and intellectual property schizoprenia.Michigan State Law Review, 1, 1–33.Yu, P. K. (2007b). International rights approaches tointellectual property: Reconceptualizing intellectualproperty interests in a human rights framework. UCDavis Law Review, 40, 1039–1149.Yu, P. K. (2008). Teaching international intellectualproperty law. Saint Louis University Law Journal, 52(3),923–950.About the AuthorsHeidi A. McKee is an associate professor ofEnglish at Miami University and affiliate facultywith Armstrong Interactive Media Studies. She isthe Internet and digital media specialist on Miami’sinstitutional review board (IRB). She is co-editor oftwo recent edited collections: Digital Writing Research:Technologies, Methodologies, and Ethical Issues, which wonthe Computers and Writing award for Best Book of2007; and Technological Ecologies and Sustainability (2009,Volume 57, Number 3, August 2010 l Technical Communication 299
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PresidentMichael A. HughesVice Pres
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