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E-raamat: Routledge Handbook of Privacy and Social Media

Edited by (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands), Edited by (University of Hohenheim, Germany)
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This volume provides the basis for contemporary privacy and social media research and informs global as well as local initiatives to address issues related to social media privacy through research, policymaking, and education.



This volume provides the basis for contemporary privacy and social media research and informs global as well as local initiatives to address issues related to social media privacy through research, policymaking, and education.

Renowned scholars in the fields of communication, psychology, philosophy, informatics, and law look back on the last decade of privacy research and project how the topic will develop in the next decade. The text begins with an overview of key scholarship in online privacy, expands to focus on influential factors shaping privacy perceptions and behaviors – such as culture, gender, and trust – and continues with specific examinations of concerns around vulnerable populations such as children and older adults. It then looks at how privacy is managed and the implications of interacting with artificial intelligence, concluding by discussing feasible solutions to some of the more pressing questions surrounding online privacy.

This handbook will be a valuable resource for advanced students, scholars, and policymakers in the fields of communication studies, digital media studies, psychology, and computer science.

Chapter 22 and Chapter 30 of this book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Part 1: Perspectives on Social Media Privacy
1. Definitions of Privacy
2. Individualistic Privacy Theories
3. Privacy Theory Social, Networked,
Relational, Collective
4. Institutional Perspectives on Privacy
5. Group
Privacy
6. A Situational Perspective on Privacy in Social Media
7. Privacy
Calculus: Theory, Studies, and New Perspectives
8. Online Privacy Cues and
Heuristics Part 2: Factors Shaping Social Media Privacy
9. Social Media
Affordances and Privacy
10. Privacy and Trust
11. Challenges in Studying
Social Media Privacy Literacy
12. Privacy Breaches
13. Privacy Cynicism:
Resignation in the Face of Agency Constraints
14. Intercultural Privacy
15.
Privacy and Gender Part 3: Populations and Their Social Media Privacy
16. The
Translucent Family: Sharenting and Privacy Negotiations between Children and
Parents
17. An Intimate Relation: Adolescent Development, Self-disclosure,
and Privacy
18. Privacy in Later Life
19. Toward a Better Understanding of
Minorities Privacy in Social Media 20.Inequalities and Privacy in the
Context of Social Media Part 4: Algorithms and Privacy
21. Privacy in
Interactions with Machines and Intelligent Systems
22. Social Credit System
and Privacy
23. Microtargeting, Privacy, and the Need for Regulating
Algorithms
24. Health Data and Privacy Part 5: Solutions to Preserve Social
Media Privacy
25. Nudges (and Deceptive Patterns) for Privacy: Six Years
Later
26. Communicating Information Security
27. From Procedural Rights to
Political Economy: New Horizons for Regulating Online Privacy
28. Regulating
Privacy on Online Social Networks
29. Consumer Privacy and Data Protection in
the EU
30. The Role of Participants in Online Privacy Research: Ethical and
Practical Considerations
Sabine Trepte is a full professor of Media Psychology in the Department of Communication at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany.

Philipp K. Masur is an assistant professor in the Department of Communication Science at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands.