Web 2.0 technologies have changed the way users interact with the Internet. Users play a growing role in the generation of content, and while doing so disclose a piece of themselves. We seek to provide a theoretical link between the boundary characteristics of a social networking website and self-disclosure. Utilizing Communication Privacy Management Theory, we focus on two forms of boundaries: mode of entry boundary and ingroup/outgroup boundary. We propose that these boundaries play a role in the implicit boundary coordination and negotiation between the users of the environment and the website. This negotiation influences users’ perceived publicness of the environment, which influences their self-disclosure behaviors due to their risk av...
On online social networks (OSNs) such as Facebook and Twitter, the massive self-disclosure has attra...
In this study, we attempt to understand one frequently observed paradox in user social networking be...
Social media and other web 2.0 tools have provided users with the platform to interact with and also...
Social network sites (SNSs) help satisfy the human need to build connections but fulfilling such nee...
User-generated content is the backbone of any social networking site (SNS) and an important pillar o...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the relative impacts of perceived cost, perceived ...
The prevailing paradigm in Internet privacy litera-ture, treating privacy within a context merely of...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the relative impacts of perceived cost, perceived ...
Every month, millions of people log onto social network sites (SNSs) to disclose billions of pieces ...
The privacy paradox describes a phenomenon whereby there is no connection between stated privacy con...
This study applied a novel theoretical framework of communication privacy management theory (CPM) to...
Despite the considerable amount of self-disclosure in Online Social Networks (OSN), the motivation b...
The privacy paradox describes a phenomenon whereby there is no connection between stated privacy con...
Online social networking offers a new, easy and inexpensive way to maintain already existing relatio...
Social Media Websites are used by individuals to find new friends, (re)connect with old friends, fam...
On online social networks (OSNs) such as Facebook and Twitter, the massive self-disclosure has attra...
In this study, we attempt to understand one frequently observed paradox in user social networking be...
Social media and other web 2.0 tools have provided users with the platform to interact with and also...
Social network sites (SNSs) help satisfy the human need to build connections but fulfilling such nee...
User-generated content is the backbone of any social networking site (SNS) and an important pillar o...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the relative impacts of perceived cost, perceived ...
The prevailing paradigm in Internet privacy litera-ture, treating privacy within a context merely of...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the relative impacts of perceived cost, perceived ...
Every month, millions of people log onto social network sites (SNSs) to disclose billions of pieces ...
The privacy paradox describes a phenomenon whereby there is no connection between stated privacy con...
This study applied a novel theoretical framework of communication privacy management theory (CPM) to...
Despite the considerable amount of self-disclosure in Online Social Networks (OSN), the motivation b...
The privacy paradox describes a phenomenon whereby there is no connection between stated privacy con...
Online social networking offers a new, easy and inexpensive way to maintain already existing relatio...
Social Media Websites are used by individuals to find new friends, (re)connect with old friends, fam...
On online social networks (OSNs) such as Facebook and Twitter, the massive self-disclosure has attra...
In this study, we attempt to understand one frequently observed paradox in user social networking be...
Social media and other web 2.0 tools have provided users with the platform to interact with and also...