Powerful Privacy Norms in Social Network Discourse

要旨

Social media companies wield power over their users through design, policy, and also through their participation in public discourse. We set out to understand how companies leverage public relations to influence expectations of privacy and privacy-related norms. To interrogate the discourse productions of companies in relation to privacy, we examine the blogs associated with three major social media platforms: Facebook, Instagram (both owned by Facebook Inc.), and Snapchat. We analyze privacy-related posts using critical discourse analysis to demonstrate how these powerful entities construct narratives about users and their privacy expectations. We find that each of these platforms often make use of discourse about “vulnerable” identities to invoke relations of power, while at the same time, advancing interpretations and values that favor data capitalism. Finally, we discuss how these public narratives might influence the construction of users’ own interpretations of appropriate privacy norms and conceptions of self. We contend that expectations of privacy and social norms are not simply artifacts of users’ own needs and desires, but co-constructions that reflect the influence of social media companies themselves.

著者
Nora McDonald
University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Andrea Forte
Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3479565

会議: CSCW2021

The 24th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing

セッション: Privacy and Trust

Papers Room A
8 件の発表
2021-10-25 21:00:00
2021-10-25 22:30:00