期刊
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY
卷 16, 期 7, 页码 1051-1067出版社
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1461444814543995
关键词
Context collapse; Facebook; privacy; social media; social network sites; teenagers
While much attention is given to young people's online privacy practices on sites like Facebook, current theories of privacy fail to account for the ways in which social media alter practices of information-sharing and visibility. Traditional models of privacy are individualistic, but the realities of privacy reflect the location of individuals in contexts and networks. The affordances of social technologies, which enable people to share information about others, further preclude individual control over privacy. Despite this, social media technologies primarily follow technical models of privacy that presume individual information control. We argue that the dynamics of sites like Facebook have forced teens to alter their conceptions of privacy to account for the networked nature of social media. Drawing on their practices and experiences, we offer a model of networked privacy to explain how privacy is achieved in networked publics.
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