衡量用户对社交媒体安全和隐私的信心

Mirna Gilman Ranogajec, Boris Badurina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在当今的信息社会中,成为社交媒体等在线社区的一部分是一种日常场景。参与几乎已经成为强制性的,以至于成为一个人的物理环境的虚拟极端。这个虚拟的极限是个人通向外部世界的窗口,反之亦然。成为社交媒体的一部分的过程已经变得非常容易和用户友好,一个人只需要几个私人信息条目就可以与世界其他地方进行交流和联系。从用户的角度来看,考虑到加入一个在线社区所获得的好处,这可能是一个很小的代价,但随着社交网络平台的兴起,社交网络服务的隐私问题也随之出现。值得怀疑的是,有多少社交媒体用户会考虑他们在网上上传或发布的信息,无论是他们的位置、爱好、工作地点、年龄还是其他任何私人信息。有多少用户在首次注册社交媒体账户时真正阅读了安全和隐私条款?哪些私人信息是人们可以放心地进入并分享到社交网站上的?在社交媒体框架中发现了越来越多的漏洞,这些漏洞可能会损害用户的隐私,或者可能以用户无意的方式被滥用。2010年,谷歌首席执行官埃里克·施密特(Eric Schmidt)甚至被引述说:“……如果我们充分了解你的信息和位置,并使用人工智能,我们就能预测你要去哪里。”(Snickars, Pelle, Vonderau, 2012)。这句话本身就引发了很多担忧和问题,即用户在网上发布的信息究竟是如何被使用的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Measuring user confidence in social media security and privacy
In today’s Information society it is an everyday scenario to be a part of an online community such as social media. Participation has become almost mandatory to the point of acting as a virtual extremity to one’s physical environment. This virtual extremity is the individual’s window to the outside world and vice versa. The process of being a part of social media has become very easy and user friendly where one is only a few private information entries away from communicating and connecting with the rest of the world. From the user’s perspective it may be a small price considering what it is gained from joining an online community, but with the rise of social networking platforms, arise privacy concerns regarding social networking services. It is questionable how many social media users consider the information they upload or post about online whether it’s their location, hobbies, employment places, age or any other private information. How many users actually read security and privacy terms when first registering for a social media account? What private information are individuals comfortable with entering and sharing on social networking sites? More and more loopholes are being found in social media frameworks that may compromise user’s privacy or that can be misused in a way that was not intended by the user. In 2010, the Google CEO Eric Schmidt was even quoted “… If we look at enough of your messaging and your location, and use artificial intelligence, we can predict where you are going to go.” (Snickars, Pelle, Vonderau, 2012). That line alone raised a lot of concerns and questions about how exactly is the information users put online being used.
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