Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook

Young people have obtained a reputation for caring less about their privacy due to their self-revealing presence on social media. Although one might easily be inclined to think that young people do not care about their privacy, an explanation for this could be that young people simply have a differe...

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Main Authors: Wouter M. P. Steijn, Alexander P. Schouten, Anton H. Vedder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Masaryk University 2016-05-01
Series:Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberpspace
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cyberpsychology.eu/article/view/6183
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author Wouter M. P. Steijn
Alexander P. Schouten
Anton H. Vedder
author_facet Wouter M. P. Steijn
Alexander P. Schouten
Anton H. Vedder
author_sort Wouter M. P. Steijn
collection DOAJ
description Young people have obtained a reputation for caring less about their privacy due to their self-revealing presence on social media. Although one might easily be inclined to think that young people do not care about their privacy, an explanation for this could be that young people simply have a different idea of what privacy entails. This study aims to investigate the underlying mechanisms that may explain differences in privacy concerns between younger and older people and between users and non-users of social network sites (SNSs). 1.008 users of SNS and 712 non-users participated in the study with a stratified distribution over adolescents, young adults, and adults. The results show that the difference in perceived risk-benefit balance partly mediates the relationship between use or non-use of SNSs and concern. SNS users are less concerned because they perceive more benefits relative to risks. Concern regarding privacy between young and old was mediated by their differences in privacy conceptions. Older individuals were more likely to associate situations related to personal information with privacy. In turn, these individuals reported more concern regarding their privacy.
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spelling doaj.art-fab53a3343e34f518b7cb26a848c97152024-03-23T13:15:09ZengMasaryk UniversityCyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberpspace1802-79622016-05-0110110.5817/CP2016-1-3Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on FacebookWouter M. P. SteijnAlexander P. SchoutenAnton H. VedderYoung people have obtained a reputation for caring less about their privacy due to their self-revealing presence on social media. Although one might easily be inclined to think that young people do not care about their privacy, an explanation for this could be that young people simply have a different idea of what privacy entails. This study aims to investigate the underlying mechanisms that may explain differences in privacy concerns between younger and older people and between users and non-users of social network sites (SNSs). 1.008 users of SNS and 712 non-users participated in the study with a stratified distribution over adolescents, young adults, and adults. The results show that the difference in perceived risk-benefit balance partly mediates the relationship between use or non-use of SNSs and concern. SNS users are less concerned because they perceive more benefits relative to risks. Concern regarding privacy between young and old was mediated by their differences in privacy conceptions. Older individuals were more likely to associate situations related to personal information with privacy. In turn, these individuals reported more concern regarding their privacy.https://cyberpsychology.eu/article/view/6183Social mediaprivacy concernsprivacy conceptionsrisk-benefit trade-offadolescentsdevelopmental differences
spellingShingle Wouter M. P. Steijn
Alexander P. Schouten
Anton H. Vedder
Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberpspace
Social media
privacy concerns
privacy conceptions
risk-benefit trade-off
adolescents
developmental differences
title Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
title_full Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
title_fullStr Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
title_full_unstemmed Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
title_short Why concern regarding privacy differs: The influence of age and (non-)participation on Facebook
title_sort why concern regarding privacy differs the influence of age and non participation on facebook
topic Social media
privacy concerns
privacy conceptions
risk-benefit trade-off
adolescents
developmental differences
url https://cyberpsychology.eu/article/view/6183
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