Privacy in the age of facebook : discourse, architecture, consequences
Access Status
Authors
Date
2012Supervisor
Type
Award
Metadata
Show full item recordFaculty
Collection
Abstract
Most academic and journalistic discussions of privacy on Facebook have centred on users, rather than the company behind the site. The result is an overwhelming focus on the perceived shortcomings of users with respect to irresponsible privacy behaviours, rather than an examination of the potential role that Facebook Inc. may have in encouraging such behaviours. Aiming to counterbalance this common technologically deterministic perspective, this thesis deploys a multi-layered ethnographic approach in service of a deep and nuanced analysis of privacy on Facebook. This approach not only looks at both the users and creators of Facebook, it examines Facebook Inc. in the context of historical, cultural and discursive perspectives.Specifically, this thesis details how the company's privacy policy and design decisions are guided not simply by profit, but by a belief system which which encourages "radical transparency" (Kirkpatrick, 2010) and is at odds with conventional understandings of privacy. In turn, drawing on Fiske's model of popular culture, users "make do" with the limited privacy choices afforded them by the site, while at the same time attempting to maximise its social utility. As this dynamic demonstrates, Facebook Inc. plays a critical, yet often overlooked role in shaping privacy norms and behaviours through site policies and architecture. Taken together, the layers of this thesis provide greater insight into user behaviour with respect to privacy, and, more broadly, demonstrate the importance of including critical analyses of social media companies in examinations of privacy culture.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Bunn, Anna (2013)Facebook has recently been subject to scrutiny by privacy regulators in Europe, as well as by the US Federal Trade Commission, in relation to the introduction of its 'tag suggest' feature. This feature uses face recognition ...
-
Thompson, Nik ; Ahmad, A.; Maynard, S. (2021)Purpose: It is a widely held belief that users make a rational cost-benefit decision when choosing whether to disclose information online. Yet, in the privacy context, the evidence is far from conclusive suggesting that ...
-
Willson, Michele ; Kinder-Kurlanda, Katharina (2019)As continual scandals around internet data collection, manipulation and dissemination (the Snowden disclosures, the Facebook emotion contagion research and more recently, the Cambridge Analytica revelations) have made ...