10 February 2015

Information technology is moving faster than a speeding bullet. The prospect research field needs to keep talking about specific legal and ethical threats to help us make decisions. I hope you will continue the conversation! 


-Jen
P.S. It's so easy to unsubscribe or update your list choices. Just go to the bottom of this email for the links. If you want to unsubscribe for any reason, I won't be offended. Promise.
Researcher Sued for Scraping!

 

Can you imagine if that headline was about you? How would that impact your organization and your fundraising career? Would it be fatal or a blip in the radar?

 

I'm an emotional person. Because of this I could easily spend hours chatting about the law and ethics. But when I talk with a highly analytical, logical person, the conversation is usually quite short. Is it legal? Is it public? What's the problem? Emotions! That's what!

 

No matter what your personality type, the only thing that really matters is what your donors and the community believe. Because if they perceive that you have done something unethical and possibly illegal it can be very damaging to your fundraising revenue, not to mention the organization as a whole.

 

Sarah Bernstein did a very good job of examining the APRA Social Media Ethics Statement so I won't go over that here. Instead I'd like to have a very specific conversation evaluating a specific situation - scraping on LinkedIn.

 

Scraping LinkedIn

 

I'm not starting this conversation. That already happened on the PRSPCT-L list-serv. You can search the archives for these threads:

  • Using Scraper with LinkedIn
  • Experience with ProspectVisual's LinkedIn Alumni Employment Info?
  • INFO: LinkedIn.com and permitted uses

As a prospect research professional I would love to have a way to get all that wonderful LinkedIn data in a format that I could use for analysis!

 

According to Wikipedia, Web Scraping is a software technique that simulates human exploration of the web and transforms unstructured data on the web, typically in HTML format, into structured data that can be stored and analyzed in a central local database or spreadsheet. Because it is automated the software can process large amounts of information.

 

An example of successful scraping we take for granted are the giving databases we subscribe to. We know that the vendor scours the web for giving recognition reports and other public information about giving. The vendor indexes the information and we merrily search the resulting database.

 

LinkedIn Public Profiles

 

The first question in the LinkedIn Scraping discussion is whether the information being scraped is from the outside of the service - the public-facing side - or whether it is being scraped from behind the login - the private-facing side.

 

ProspectVisual, a relationship mapping software, scrapes LinkedIn data from the public-facing side. ProspectVisual never logs in to the software. It doesn't have to. For example, my LinkedIn profile is almost 100% public. You can find my LinkedIn profile on a Google search and never login.

 

At the very beginning of the LinkedIn User Agreement in Section 1.2 it states:

 

You agree that by clicking "Join Now" "Join LinkedIn", "Sign Up" or similar, registering, accessing or using our services...you are entering into a legally binding agreement.

 

ProspectVisual never enters into the agreement. That's quite clear and simple from a legal perspective. And given the prospect research field's warm embrace of many other vendors who scrape the web, it would seem it passes the ethical test too.

 

LinkedIn Private Profiles

 

Once you login to LinkedIn you are now bound by the LinkedIn User Agreement. A search in the agreement for the word "scrape" brings up this line under Section 8.2, the things you promise NOT to do:

 

Scrape or copy profiles and information of others through any means (including crawlers, browser plugins and add-ons, and any other technology or manual work);

 

The question on the list-serv was whether it was okay to login and scrape small amounts of data for the purpose of identifying new prospects for the nonprofit organization.

 

Illegal

It could easily be argued that this scraping is illegal and violates the user agreement because scraping, automated or manual, implies taking a bulk of data from LinkedIn and transferring it for another purpose.

 

Legal

But how much data or at what frequency crosses the line into scraping territory? And if you are not scraping information to re-sell it, but instead to further your fundraising, is that a use that is either appropriate or unlikely to be prosecuted?

 

Ethical or Unethical?

If it is unclear whether our scraping data when bound by the user agreement is illegal or not, is it ethical to continue scraping? How would our donors and network feel about the way we are accessing the data they have placed behind the LinkedIn login?

 

Healthy Conversation

 

Ethics stirs emotions. But that doesn't mean we can't engage in healthy conversation. I was delighted that the most recent thread had all the hallmarks of a mature debate:

  • Asking lots of questions
  • Making statements based on found information, not pure emotion
  • Not disagreeing quickly, but working to be sure you understood the other person
  • Recognizing that others may disagree in part or in whole and that's okay

Now at your next staff meeting you have a juicy topic to bring up under "New Business". And if you are a blogger, maybe there's a piece of this conversation you'd like to take on?

 

 

 Click to Comment 

 


Recent Blog Posts

01-13-2015 05:45:44 AM

Looking back on 2014 I realize that I've done quite a few screenings and research verification projects. And that means I've had lots of conversations with fundraisers who ask a lot of the same questions. I thought you might like to eavesdrop on some of those Q&A's! Very soon after I get into a conversation [...] The post Speedy Research Verification appeared first on Jennifer Filla. ...»

 

12-09-2014 08:45:25 AM

Corporate and foundation research is different from individual research. Could it be so simple? About as simple as stating that boys are different from girls! They are different, but also the same in many ways. It's complicated! Let's take a quick peek at how corporate and foundation prospects differ when we need to identify new [...] The post Prioritizing Corp & Fdn Prospects appeared first on Jennifer Filla. ...»

 

11-11-2014 05:45:32 AM

The future has a way of entering slowly, day-by-day. But sometimes the writing is on the wall. The words I see on the fundraising wall are Data Analytics. Sure, you say, we all know that. But what does it mean to your organization? To you? Answer: Innovate or die. That may sound extreme. And it [...] The post Innovate or Die: Post-Recession Impact on Finding Donors appeared first on Jennifer Filla. ...»


In This Issue
Catch Jen!

Need New Hire Training?



Training-In-A-Box courses give you the tools and flexibility to use ready-made lectures, homework and quizzes or mix and match with your own materials.

 

About Aspire Research Group

Aspire Research Group is committed to creating stronger nonprofits and deeper donor relationships through prospect research.

We assist organizations throughout the country that are concerned about finding the right prospects, worried about what size gift to ask for, or are struggling to meet major gift goals.

...Because every development office should have the benefits of professional prospect research.
Aspire Research Group LLC | 727 202 3405 | jen@aspireresearchgroup.com | http://www.aspireresearchgroup.com
13799 Park Blvd, Suite 328, Seminole, FL 33776