Capturing social networking privacy preferences: can default policies help alleviate tradeoffs between expressiveness and user burden?
Ramprasad RavichandranMichael BenischPatrick Gage KelleyNorman M. SadehPublished in: SOUPS (2009)
Keyphrases
- social networking
- personal information
- user preferences
- social networking services
- user behavior
- micro blogging
- social networks
- social activities
- social media
- individual user
- social communities
- crowd sourcing
- social bookmarking
- privacy policies
- online social networks
- mobile communication
- online social networking
- social software
- private information
- social networking sites
- collective intelligence
- data collection
- user interface
- informal learning
- user experience
- user interaction
- emerging trends
- privacy concerns
- social relationships
- user profiles
- user privacy
- content sharing
- data mining
- expert systems
- recommender systems
- collaborative filtering
- mashup