- 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open blogging, presenters now have a way of politely asking bloggers in the audience not to send potentially sensitive unpublished data out into the tweetosphere (although I'd agree with Anders' comment on Friendfeed that the wording would probably be better phrased as a request rather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.
Search
Profile
Daniel MacArthur
I write about the genetic and evolutionary basis of human variation, and the companies trying to sell you information about your genome.
Subscribe via RSS.
Follow me on Twitter.
Recent Posts
- A short but glorious rant
- My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- DIY ancestry inference from personal genomic data
- Details on the future of the deCODEme service
- deCODE Genetics declare bankruptcy, will sell core business to US investors
- 23andMe raises prices, splits its health and ancestry analyses
- 23andMe gets scooped on hair curl genes
- More on return of research data to participants from Genomics Law Report
- Research subjects should have access to their own data
- First ever association study using whole genome sequences
Recent Comments
- Stephen on A short but glorious rant
- detox on On the challenges of conference blogging
- Ashley on Allowing children to be born with severe disease is morally equivalent to child abuse, round 2
- Pet on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- Shawn on Chinese summer camp to offer genetic tests for IQ, athletic performance, emotional control
- Ronald Binder on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- Marc on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- K Risipin on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- Geneticist from the East on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
- Steven Murphy MD on My Gene Profile: the lamest genetic testing scam on the internet?
Archives
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
Blogs I read:
Consumer Genomics:
Genomic Science:
- Anthony Fejes
- David Dooling
- Dan Koboldt
- Luke Jostins
- Pathogenomics
- Jan Aerts
- Popgen Ramblings
- Adaptive Complexity
- Genomicron
Genetics/Evolution Blogs:
- John Hawks
- Gene Expression
- Gene Expression SB
- Eye on DNA
- Dienekes
- Yann Klimentidis
- European Genetics
- Discovering Biology in a Digital World
- The Genetic Genealogist
- business|bytes|genes|molecules
- Thomas Mailund
- John Halamka
General Science:
Corporate Blogs:
Skeptics:
« 23andMe leading push for regulatory changes for direct-to-consumer genetic testing | Main | UK House of Lords report on genomic medicine: implications for DTC genetic testing »
Conference blogging: icons for presenters
Category: conference blogging
Posted on: July 6, 2009 9:00 AM, by Daniel MacArthur
Find more posts in:
Life Science
Medicine & Health
Share this: Facebook Twitter Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More



