- In cases where the default conference policy is that bloggers need to seek advance permission from speakers, Cameron's "blog freely" icons are a way of letting the audience know that this permission is openly granted.
- In cases where the default conference policy is open blogging, presenters now have a way of politely asking bloggers in the audience not to send potentially sensitive unpublished data out into the tweetosphere (although I'd agree with Anders' comment on Friendfeed that the wording would probably be better phrased as a request rather than the "you are not permitted to..." on the current slides).
- In cases where the default conference policy is unclear or non-existent (currently the majority of cases!) these icons give presenters the ability to make their own position clear to everyone in the audience.
Genetic Future
Commentary on human genetics and evolution, direct-to-consumer genetic testing, and the personal genomics industry.
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Daniel MacArthur
I write about the genetic and evolutionary basis of human variation, and the companies trying to sell you information about your genome.
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Conference blogging: icons for presenters
Category: conference blogging
Posted on: July 6, 2009 9:00 AM, by Daniel MacArthur
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