Online social networks like LinkedIn and Facebook regularly use People You May Know (PYMK) algorithms to encourage connectivity among their users. We argue that these algorithms have the unintended effect of making users’ interactions more visible, which can deter users from being intimate online. To test this theory, we analyze the database of a large online social network that lets users buy and exchange electronic greeting cards (eCards) with each other over the network. We find that users are more likely to buy eCards when they have more connections, but less likely to buy them if they have formed connections to friends of friends. We attribute the latter effect to the increased social visibility that comes with connecting to friends of...
Safeguarding personally identifiable information (PII) is crucial because such information is increa...
The explosive growth of online social systems has changed how individuals consume and disseminate in...
In this study, we carry out a methodological replication of the research done by Choi et al. (2015) ...
Online social networks like LinkedIn and Facebook regularly use People You May Know (PYMK) algorithm...
Privacy has become the key concern of many users when they are confronted with friend requests on on...
The recent availability of massive amounts of networked data generated by email, instant messaging, ...
Networks and the relationships embedded in them are critical determinants of how people communicate,...
In the last few years, there has been a growing interest in studying online social and affiliation n...
Social media is radically altering the human social landscape. Before the internet era, human intera...
In online social networks, new social connectivity is established when a requestee accepts a friend ...
Abstract Context: Online social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace have become the pref...
In the present article, we discuss norms of friendship and privacy on social network sites by examin...
There are rich and varied social ties between people in our daily lives. The familiar stranger is on...
Online Social Networks (OSNs) have become a mainstream cultural phenomenon in the past years, where ...
Social interaction and data integration in the digital society can affect the control that individua...
Safeguarding personally identifiable information (PII) is crucial because such information is increa...
The explosive growth of online social systems has changed how individuals consume and disseminate in...
In this study, we carry out a methodological replication of the research done by Choi et al. (2015) ...
Online social networks like LinkedIn and Facebook regularly use People You May Know (PYMK) algorithm...
Privacy has become the key concern of many users when they are confronted with friend requests on on...
The recent availability of massive amounts of networked data generated by email, instant messaging, ...
Networks and the relationships embedded in them are critical determinants of how people communicate,...
In the last few years, there has been a growing interest in studying online social and affiliation n...
Social media is radically altering the human social landscape. Before the internet era, human intera...
In online social networks, new social connectivity is established when a requestee accepts a friend ...
Abstract Context: Online social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace have become the pref...
In the present article, we discuss norms of friendship and privacy on social network sites by examin...
There are rich and varied social ties between people in our daily lives. The familiar stranger is on...
Online Social Networks (OSNs) have become a mainstream cultural phenomenon in the past years, where ...
Social interaction and data integration in the digital society can affect the control that individua...
Safeguarding personally identifiable information (PII) is crucial because such information is increa...
The explosive growth of online social systems has changed how individuals consume and disseminate in...
In this study, we carry out a methodological replication of the research done by Choi et al. (2015) ...