Information revelation and privacy in online social networks

R. Gross, A. Acquisti
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引用次数: 2446

Abstract

Participation in social networking sites has dramatically increased in recent years. Services such as Friendster, Tribe, or the Facebook allow millions of individuals to create online profiles and share personal information with vast networks of friends - and, often, unknown numbers of strangers. In this paper we study patterns of information revelation in online social networks and their privacy implications. We analyze the online behavior of more than 4,000 Carnegie Mellon University students who have joined a popular social networking site catered to colleges. We evaluate the amount of information they disclose and study their usage of the site's privacy settings. We highlight potential attacks on various aspects of their privacy, and we show that only a minimal percentage of users changes the highly permeable privacy preferences.
在线社交网络中的信息泄露与隐私
近年来,参与社交网站的人数急剧增加。像Friendster、Tribe或Facebook这样的服务允许数百万人创建在线档案,并与庞大的朋友网络分享个人信息——通常是未知数量的陌生人。本文研究了在线社交网络中的信息披露模式及其隐私含义。我们分析了4000多名卡内基梅隆大学(Carnegie Mellon University)学生的在线行为,他们加入了一个面向大学的流行社交网站。我们会评估他们披露的信息量,并研究他们对网站隐私设置的使用情况。我们强调了对他们隐私的各个方面的潜在攻击,我们表明只有很小比例的用户改变了高度可渗透的隐私偏好。
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