Understanding the privacy behavior of adolescents on Facebook: The role of peers, popularity and trust

Publication date

2016-10-03

Authors

Hofstra, BasISNI 0000000419569248
Corten, RenseISNI 000000038740582X
van Tubergen, FrankORCID 0000-0002-6415-2877ISNI 0000000383575215

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We study whether peer influence processes, popularity and trust predict privacy settings on Facebook. We use large-scale survey data from 3434 Dutch adolescents combined with observed privacy behavior on Facebook. The findings show that peer influence processes play a role and that adolescents imitate the privacy settings of their peers in the classroom. Such imitation processes are particularly pronounced for highly connected classrooms. The results show that more popular adolescents in the classroom are more likely to publicly display their Facebook profiles. Furthermore, we find that low-trust groups (ethnic minorities, lower educated and younger adolescents, and girls) more frequently opt for private Facebook profiles.

Keywords

Privacy, Social networking sites, Facebook, Adolescents, Trust, Popularity, Taverne

Citation

Hofstra, B, Corten, R & van Tubergen, F A 2016, 'Understanding the privacy behavior of adolescents on Facebook : The role of peers, popularity and trust', Computers in Human Behavior, vol. 60, pp. 611-621. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2016.02.091