Culturally Specific Privacy Practices on Social Network Sites: Privacy Boundary Permeability Management in Photo Sharing by American and Chinese College-Age Users

Authors

  • Yang Liu University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Jun Fan Huaqio University, China; Huachiew Chalermprakiet University, Thailand

Keywords:

culture, Facebook, privacy, Renren, social network sites

Abstract

This article explores the cultural specificity of privacy practices on social network sites (SNSs) by comparing 10 college-age American Facebook users’ and 10 college-age Chinese Renren users’ in their photo sharing of significant events during winter vacation. Using communication privacy management theory, we show that Chinese participants more tightly controlled their privacy boundary permeability than American participants. Also, Chinese participants’ relationships with Renren friends—potential information co-owners—featured more distance and formality than American participants’ close interactions with Facebook friends. We interpret the findings in light of American and Chinese cultures to contemplate the cultural manifestation in SNS privacy practices.

Author Biographies

Yang Liu, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Yang Liu is a doctoral student at the Department of Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research interests include online privacy practices, and the re-articulation of objectivity in today’s journalism. His phone number is 317-358-5585.

Jun Fan, Huaqio University, China; Huachiew Chalermprakiet University, Thailand

Dr. Jun Fan is an associate professor at the College of Humanities of Huaqiao University, China. He now teaches Chinese language and literature at Huachiew Chalermprekiet University, Thailand.

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Published

2015-06-01

Issue

Section

Articles