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About the author
Introduction
1.
Introduction & Executive Summary
2.
The First Section: A Framework
2.1.
The Landscape for Sensors and Journalism
2.2.
Sensors and Sensibilia: A Historical Survey
2.3.
The Characteristics of Sensors
2.4.
What Can be Sensed
3.
The Second Section: Case Studies
3.1.
Houston Chronicle—In Harm’s Way
3.2.
Public Lab – Homebrew Sensing
3.3.
USA Today—Ghost Factories
3.4.
Sun Sentinel – Above the Law
3.5.
WNYC – Cicada Tracker
3.6.
Planet Money – Planet Money Makes A T-Shirt
3.7.
Washington Post – ShotSpotter Tracks Gunshots in D.C.
3.8.
Drones for Journalism: An Overview of the U.S. Industry
4.
The Third Section: The Legal and Ethical Considerations for Sensors and Journalism
4.1.
Legality, Ethics and Journalistic Sensing: An Introduction
4.2.
Consent, False Light, and Libel
4.3.
Rights, Ownership, Ethics and Sensors in Journalism
4.4.
The Ethics of Sensor Journalism: Community, Privacy, and Control
4.5.
Sensor Journalism Through Open and Closed-source Initiatives
4.6.
Makers, Journalists and the Federal Communications Commission: Why the Laws Exist
4.7.
The Traps of Open Source for Sensor Journalism
4.8.
The Legal Landscape of sUAS Journalism in the United States
4.9.
When Things Fail or Fall: Personal Injury and Negligence
4.10.
Journalism and Truth in Sensing
4.11.
Technical Considerations in the Design and Execution of Sensor Journalism Campaigns
4.12.
The People Within the Pixels
5.
The Fourth, Final Section: Recommendations
6.
Endnotes
7.
Author Biographies
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Sensors and Journalism
The First Section: A Framework