"We are Anonymous."

Anonymity in the Public Sphere – Challenges of Free and Open Communication

Authors

  • Saskia Sell Free University of Berlin

Keywords:

anonymity, Anonymous, authorship, authenticity, accountability, credibility, freedom of communication, freedom of speech, journalism ethics, online communication, privacy

Abstract

Anonymity, the stealth mode of public communication, challenges different actors who deal with freedom of communication issues in their day to day life – be it professional journalists, information and communication scientists, technicians or political activists. This article aims to deliver theoretical background on the concept of anonymity on the macro-level, as well as to shed light on how different communicators deal with anonymity on the micro-level. Based on the example of the Anonymous movement, communicative actions are put in relation to media technological artifacts and their surrounding media environment with a focus on journalistic practice and public response to the phenomenon. The analysis concludes with the need for a preservation of options for anonymous public communication as a dimension of freedom of communication after carefully considering both the advantages and the potential risks connected to that mode of private-public communication.

Author Biography

Saskia Sell, Free University of Berlin

Saskia Sell works as a research associate in the Journalism Department of the Institute of Media and Communication Studies at Freie Universität Berlin. She received a Magistra Artium in a double major program in English and American Studies at Humboldt Universität zu Berlin and Media and Communication Studies at Freie Universität Berlin. During her period of studies, she was a European Union fellow at the University of Warwick/Coventry (UK) and a Humboldt fellow at New York University's Steinhardt School of Media, Culture and Communication (US). She also took additional photojournalism training with Prof. Kathy Willens (NYU/Associated Press), worked as an online reporter/editor and on a research project in the field of gender media studies, and attended Berlin based summer schools on game development and media philosophy. She organized the German-Russian symposium “Transcultural Media Research in the Context of Digital Communication and Social Change” in St. Petersburg 2012 and is currently teaching journalism and digital society classes at FU while pursuing a doctorate, focusing on changing dimensions of freedom of communication in the context of media technological development in her research.

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How to Cite

Sell, S. (2013). "We are Anonymous.": Anonymity in the Public Sphere – Challenges of Free and Open Communication. Global Media Journal - German Edition, 3(1). Retrieved from https://globalmediajournal.de/index.php/gmj/article/view/107