公众朋友与私人分享:了解分享文化中隐私的转变

Z. Sujon, Lisette Johnston
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文试图解决隐私和共享文化之间的紧张关系。尽管许多人声称隐私已经消亡,但研究表明,隐私已经从一种基于控制的个性化权利转变为一种更社会化、更根深蒂固、更公开、更网络化的权利。我们从7个媒体日记、对这些日记作者的采访和对伦敦18-36岁的英国居民的一项调查(N=270)中得出结论,我们的目标是更好地了解隐私和分享文化作为生活经验。基于这些证据,我们确定了一些主题。首先,隐私很重要。尽管受访者认为共享是嵌入式和网络化的,但他们对隐私的体验和理解仍然比较传统。对大多数人来说,隐私是一种注重控制的个性化权利。此外,我们从数据中发现了几个主题——社交隐私比机构隐私更重要;年轻的受访者用“公众好友”和“私人分享”来为他们的分享行为辩护和解释;受访者还经常谈到社交媒体资料上的“角色”;最后,受访者越来越多地将他们在社交媒体上分享的内容去个人化。所有这些主题都指向了受访者运用分享策略的方式,一方面是为了保护他们的隐私,另一方面是为了管理他们对社交媒体使用的分享期望,以及更广泛的分享文化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public Friends and Private Sharing: Understanding Shifting Privacies in Sharing Culture
This paper seeks to address the tension between privacy and sharing culture. Despite many claims that privacy is dead, research suggests that there is a shift from privacy as an individualized right based around control to something more social, more embedded, more public and more networked. Drawing from seven media diaries, interviews with those diarists and a survey (N=270) of London, UK residents aged 18-36, we aim for a better picture of privacy and sharing culture as lived experiences. Based on this evidence, we identify a number of themes. First, privacy matters. Although respondents identify sharing as embedded and networked, their experiences and understanding of privacy remains more traditional. For most, privacy is an individualized right focused on control. In addition, we find several themes emerging from the data -- social privacy is more important than institutional privacy; younger respondents talk about "public friends" and "private sharing" to justify and explain their sharing practices; respondents also commonly talk about a 'persona' on social media profiles; and finally, respondents are increasingly depersonalizing what they share on social media. All of these themes point to ways that respondents exercise sharing strategies in part to protect their privacy, but also for managing the sharing expectations of their social media use and sharing culture more broadly.
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