Abstract
The emergence of new trends such as openness in digitalising information has led to sharing, collaborating, and selection of texts and images both visual and illustrative. These trends will provide rich, unique visual images in blogs, websites, and social media, which will contribute to research knowledge in specific and intradisciplinary mode. However, research in digital ethnography has to be collaborative and participatory and realistic without losing the unique rich history and their place-based knowledge and time-bound contexts. The number of studies have to be collated to look at the trends and patterns and the significant findings so that there are valid and realistic contribution to the different fields. The competencies of researchers to develop digital ethnography are explored in detail. They are exploring through cross cultural communication skills, skills in participatory processes within the social context, and science-technology-society approach within diverse indigenous groups both locally and globally.
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