Social networks are usually collected as dyadic data: the relations betweenpairs of actors are recorded, directed or undirected, complete or personal networks. The actors act either as sender or receiver of a tie. Three-way social network data are rare and occur when relations are recorded involving three actors. An example that will be analyzed in this paper is gossip: In a closed group setting it is recorded, by means of selfreport, who gossips with whom about whom. In three-way data, actors have three roles: as sender, receiver, and as object (of gossip). A random effects model for binary three-way social network data is developed relating the probability of a gossip tie to individual properties and roles of the actors, network relations...