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Sharing Our Lives Online: Risks and Exposure on Social Media
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The contradictions and complexities involved in the increasing sharing of personal information on social media are neatly encapsulated in this New York Times piece on a teenage personal weblogger:
"He wanted his posts to be read, and feared that people would read them, and hoped that people would read them, and didn’t care if people read them. He wanted to be included while priding himself on his outsider status. And while he sometimes wrote messages that were explicitly public — announcing a band practice, for instance — he also had his own stringent notions of etiquette. His crush had an online journal, but J. had never read it; that would be too intrusive, he explained."
Profiles and entries on Facebook, Twitter and many other such services can contain diaristic or confessional material that looks as if it is only for the author to read or perhaps for trusted friends and family — but although social media services often include tools to keep such writings private, many are visible to a large number of people or even published openly on the web with a potential audience of millions.
Through interviews with personal bloggers, I examine why such sharing takes place. I analyse how the design of social media sites influences posting behaviour and look to the future, suggesting actions users, parents and policymakers should take.
"He wanted his posts to be read, and feared that people would read them, and hoped that people would read them, and didn’t care if people read them. He wanted to be included while priding himself on his outsider status. And while he sometimes wrote messages that were explicitly public — announcing a band practice, for instance — he also had his own stringent notions of etiquette. His crush had an online journal, but J. had never read it; that would be too intrusive, he explained."
Profiles and entries on Facebook, Twitter and many other such services can contain diaristic or confessional material that looks as if it is only for the author to read or perhaps for trusted friends and family — but although social media services often include tools to keep such writings private, many are visible to a large number of people or even published openly on the web with a potential audience of millions.
Through interviews with personal bloggers, I examine why such sharing takes place. I analyse how the design of social media sites influences posting behaviour and look to the future, suggesting actions users, parents and policymakers should take.




