Day 1 Thursday 30 September

Please note: Program times are aligned to AEST Time Zone

Please note: 900 to 1100 Sessions on Day 1 are for ADM+S Members Only
Access a PDF version of the program here

840

Registration
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 20 mins

900

Welcome to ADM+S Members
E Block, Room 550 | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 15 mins

915

ADM+S projects in the News and Media Focus Area: Lightning Talks (Part 1)
E Block, Room 550 | 45 mins
Lightning Talks from higher degree research students and early career researchers

See the full list of lightning talks and summaries

Moderator: Julian Thomas

Lisa Archbold, Louisa Bartolo, Dominique Carlon, Dan Dai,
Anjalee de Silva, Rosalie Gillett, Jake Goldenfein, Danula Hettiachchi
Rakesh Kumar, Silvia Montaña-Niño, Ashwin Nagappa,
Jathan Sadowski, Sijun Shen, Zahra Stardust and Pratiwi Utami

1000

Break out session 1
E Block, Room 151 & Room 152 | 35 mins

Introducing and framing key debates and establishing collaborative activities focused on identifying new problem spaces and research areas.

Facilitators: James Meese and Jake Goldenfein

1035

Morning Tea
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | 15 mins

1050

ADM+S projects in the News and Media Focus Area: Lightning Talks (Part 2)
E Block, Room 550 | 45 mins
Lightning Talks from higher degree research students and early career researchers

See the full list of lightning talks and summaries

Moderator: Julian Thomas

Lisa Archbold, Louisa Bartolo, Dominique Carlon, Dan Dai,
Anjalee de Silva, Rosalie Gillett, Jake Goldenfein, Danula Hettiachchi
Rakesh Kumar, Silvia Montaña-Niño, Ashwin Nagappa,
Jathan Sadowski, Sijun Shen, Zahra Stardust and Pratiwi Utami

1135

Break out session 2
E Block Room 151 & Room 152 | 35 mins

Introducing and framing key debates and establishing collaborative activities focused on identifying new problem spaces and research areas.

Facilitators: James Meese and Jake Goldenfein

Open to Public Guests

1200

Registration for the Public Program
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 20 mins

1210

Lunch
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 45 mins
The public program commences – public attendees invited to lunch 

1255

Welcome
E Block, Room 550 | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 30 mins

Welcome to Country – Uncle Cheg Egert, Elder in residence at QUT
Welcome from Patrik Wikström (DMRC, QUT),  Jean Burgess (QUT) and Axel Bruns (QUT)

1315

Session 01: Overview of Critical Challenges and Opportunities in News and Media Around Automated Decision-Making
E Block, Room 550 | 45 mins

Moderator

Speakers

Axel Bruns - QUT

Jean Burgess - QUT

James Meese - RMIT

1400

Session 02: Search Engines and Recommendation Systems
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

This session considers the social and ethical issues that arise with the use of search engine rankings and recommender systems. How do these systems impact on the human experience of culture and technology? How can recommender systems account for values like diversity and representation of minority voices and cultures? What does ‘responsible recommendation’ mean, and how can – and should – platforms take responsibility for how their recommender and ranking systems display, privilege, and amplify certain messages?

Moderator

Speakers

Jeffrey Chan- RMIT

1500

Afternoon Tea
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | 30 mins

1530

Session 03: Search Personalisation and Polarisation
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

This session introduces one of the flagship research initiatives in the News & Media Focus Area: the Australian Search Experience project. The project builds on the work of ADM+S partner organisation AlgorithmWatch, whose Executive Director Matthias Spielkamp will review the outcomes of AlgorithmWatch’s 2017 data donation project in Germany. The session then outlines the aims of the Australian Search Experience project’s extension of this work, and presents early results from an analysis of its first data donations.

Discussant

Jean Burgess - QUT

Speakers

Axel Bruns - QUT

Matthias Spielkamp - AlgorithmWatch

1630

Session 04: News and Automation
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

Automated decision-making systems, algorithms, and artificial intelligence solutions are used increasingly widely in the news industry and related areas. Such tools are used in journalistic investigations, enabling data journalism and related practices; in content production, where automated newswriting produces stock market, sports, and weather reporting; and in audience engagement, as news outlets seek to maximise the visibility of their stories on search and social media platforms. This session discusses how these and other developments can assist with mundane journalistic tasks, but also introduce the potential for further staff reductions, content targeting, and journalistic error.

Moderator

Axel Bruns - QUT

Speakers

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen - Reuters Institute For The Study of Journalism

Wiebke Loosen - Hans-Bredow Institute

Edson Tandoc Jr. - Nanyang Technological University

David Tomchak - Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford

1730

Canapés and Refreshments
F Block Amphitheatre | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 30 mins

1800

QUTex Evening Event
F Block, Room 509 | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 60 mins

1900

ADM+S Members Social Event
Victoria Park Golf Complex | 309 Herston Rd, Herston
Buses will be provided for travel to this event

Day 2 Friday 1 October

840

Registration (for participants who did not register on Day 1)
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | QUT Kelvin Grove Campus | 20 mins

900

Session 05: Automated Content Curation and Moderation:
Problematic and ‘Borderline’ Content

E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

Digital platforms use a combination of manual, automated, and semi-automated tools to curate and moderate the content their users see. While egregious violations of clearly stated rules designed to prevent social harms can be met with outright bans, it is more challenging to deal with problematic, questionable or ‘borderline’ content, which occupies the grey zone at the intersection of competing values and community perspectives. This panel will cover issues around the identification and moderation of problematic content – from bots and misinformation to humour; and will evaluate current and potential future institutional, corporate, and technical responses.

Moderator

Jean Burgess - QUT

Speakers

Robyn Caplan - Data and Society

Russell Skelton - RMIT ABC Fact Check

1000

Morning Tea
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | 15 mins

1015

Session 06: Platform Governance: Race, Gender and Sexuality
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

For years, civil society, scholars and media have highlighted how digital platforms reinforce and reproduce harm. Recent accounts demonstrate how platforms overlook deeply insidious harm and fail to tackle ostensibly benign forms of abuse. At the same time, their community standards can be unfairly restrictive resulting in the removal, de-ranking, and de-monetization of consensual sexual content. This enhanced scrutiny disproportionately impacts marginalised people, who are often de-platformed and shadow banned. Moreover, platforms’ efforts to racially classify people for the purposes of personalisation and targeted advertising demonstrates how platform practices can reinforce discriminatory stereotypes and power imbalances. This session discusses how users understand online harm and safety, and considers what kinds of legal, policy and platform governance practices are necessary to help foster safe and inclusive digital environments.

Moderator

Emma Quilty - Monash University

Speakers

Kath Albury - Swinburne University

Thao Phan - Monash University

1115

Session 07: Digital Inclusion and Media Use in Remote First Nations Communities
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

In this session we will discuss how First Nations people are producing, distributing, and accessing relevant news and media services, and the crucial role of First Nations media throughout the COVID pandemic.  We will explore the impact of technological change and automation on the First Nations news and media sector and for First Nations audiences.

We will focus on the challenges in remote First Nations communities, where digital inclusion levels are among the lowest nationally, and introduce a new ADM+S research project that sets out to map digital inclusion and media in remote Indigenous communities over the next four years.

Moderator

Dr Heron Loban - Griffith University/ Chair, ACCAN Indigenous Advisory Forum

Speakers

Lauren Ganley - Telstra

Dennis Stokes – First Nations Media Australia CEO

Julian Thomas - RMIT

1215

Session 08: Facebook Advertising: The Australian Ad Observatory project
E Block, Room 550 | 60 mins

In this session we will preview the Australian Ad Observatory project, which relies on data donation to gain insight into Facebook ad targeting. We will demonstrate the research tool: a browser extension that volunteers can install to collect the ads they see when they use Facebook on a desktop or laptop computer. The tool provides users with a dashboard that allows the ads to be sorted by voluntarily provided demographic information so we can see which groups are receiving what type of ads. We anticipate using this tool during the next federal election to gain insight into how political ads are being targeted in Australia. We will also preview a tool for using an automated image classifier to reveal patterns in ad customisation and targeting.

Moderator

Mark Andrejevic - Monash University

Speakers

Daniel Angus - QUT

Bronwyn Carlson - Macquarie University

Simon Elvery - ABC

Abdul Obeid - QUT

1315

Lunch
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | 45 mins

Please note:  Sessions 1400 to 1630 are for ADM+S Members Only

1400

The Australian Search Experience project
E Block, Room 152 | 60 mins

This session reviews the current status of the Australian Search Experience project, presents early patterns in the data, and provides an opportunity to plan the next stages of the project.

Speakers

Axel Bruns and Abdul Obeid

Newsroom Automation
E Block, Room 558 |  60 mins

This interactive session discusses the current state of the study of Automated Decision-Making Systems in news and media in Australia and will invite interested researchers to have a conversation in advancing the research agenda for this area with the development of common projects for the future.

Moderator Heather Horst

Speakers
James Meese, Silvia Montaña-Niño and Haiqing Yu.

1500

Afternoon Tea
E Block, Level 5 Foyer | 15 mins

1515

The Australian Ad Observatory project
E Block, Room 152 | 60 mins

Speakers

Mark Andrejevic, Dan Angus, and Verity Trott

Voice and Automation
E Block, Room 558 |  60 mins

This session explores various social and ethical issues associated with voice-enabled intelligent assistants (Google Assistant, Amazon Alexa, or Apple Siri). Jenny and Damiano will discuss their research and then Thao will lead a conversation around opportunities for research and collaboration across the centre.

Moderator Thao Phan

Speakers
Jenny Kennedy and Damiano Spina

1615

Symposium Conclusion
E Block, Room 550 | 15 mins