DocumentCode
567347
Title
Will you be my friend? privacy implications of accepting friendships in online social networks
Author
Ghorbani, Soudeh ; Ganjali, Yashar
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
25-28 June 2012
Firstpage
340
Lastpage
345
Abstract
Online social networks (OSNs) have become extremely popular in recent years. Users actively interact in these networks and share large amounts of personal information. This has led to emergence of a treasure trove of data for many entities, from marketers and spammers to employers and intelligence agencies, which has become a serious privacy concern. Previous works have addressed many aspects about privacy in OSNs such as characterizing potential privacy leakage [14], possible ways for inferring sensitive private information [9], [18], and appropriateness of default privacy settings [11]. In contrast, we focus on the entity who plays the main role in guarding privacy: the user. By sending out friend requests to unknown users in one of the largest OSNs, we provide evidence that a considerable portion of OSN users are willing to let a stranger, possibly an adversary, into their social network, thus granting her access to the users´ personal information and to some extent to those of their friends. We study several factors that might foster such behavior, and measure the amount of information that will consequently become accessible. We find that for more than 95% of the users who accept our friend requests, we gained access to personal information that would not otherwise be accessible. We also show that the majority of the users who accept the requests have indeed changed their default privacy settings to restrict access to some parts of their personal information to their friends while making them publicly inaccessible.
Keywords
data privacy; social networking (online); OSN; default privacy settings; friend requests; friendships acceptance; marketers; online social networks; personal information; privacy concern; privacy implications; sensitive private information; spammers; Cities and towns; Robots; Online Social Networks; Personal Information; Privacy; Privacy Settings;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Society (i-Society), 2012 International Conference on
Conference_Location
London
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-0838-0
Type
conf
Filename
6284988
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