Can You See Me Now? Audience and Disclosure Regulation in Online Social Network Sites
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Abstract
The prevailing paradigm in Internet privacy literature, treating privacy within a context merely of rights and violations, is inadequate for studying the Internet as a social realm. Following Goffman on self-presentation and Altman's theorizing of privacy as an optimization between competing pressures for disclosure and withdrawal, the author investigates the mechanisms used by a sample (n = 704) of college students, the vast majority users of Facebook and Myspace, to negotiate boundaries between public and private. Findings show little to no relationship between online privacy concerns and information disclosure on online social network sites. Students manage unwanted audience concerns by adjusting profile…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.72
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Realm
- The Internet
- Internet privacy
- Negotiation
- Context (archaeology)
- Social network (sociolinguistics)
- Sociology
- Sample (material)
- Gender equality