Information sharing on social networks is ubiquitous, intuitive, and occasionally accidental. However, people may be unaware of the potential negative consequences of disclosures, such as reputational damages. Yet, people use social networks to disclose information about themselves or others, advised only by their own experiences and the context-invariant informed consent mechanism. In two online experiments (N=515 and N=765), we investigated how to aid informed sharing decisions and associate them with the potential outcomes via notifications. Based on the measurements of sharing attitudes, our results showed that the effectiveness of informing the users via notifications may depend on the timing, content, and layout of the notifications, as well as on the users' curiosity and rational cognitive style, motivating information processing. Furthermore, positive emotions may result in disregard of important information. We discuss the implications for user privacy and self-presentation. We provide recommendations on privacy-supporting system design and suggest directions for further research.
翻译:然而,人们可能不知道公开披露的潜在负面后果,例如名誉损害。然而,人们利用社交网络披露自己或其他人的信息,仅根据其自身的经验和背景差异性知情同意机制进行咨询。在两个在线实验(N=515和N=765)中,我们调查了如何协助知情共享决定,并通过通知将其与潜在结果联系起来。根据对共享态度的衡量,我们的结果显示,通过通知告知用户的有效性可能取决于通知的时间、内容和布局,以及用户的好奇和理性认知风格,激励信息处理。此外,积极的情绪可能导致忽视重要信息。我们讨论了对用户隐私和自我介绍的影响。我们提出了关于隐私支持系统设计的建议,并为进一步研究提出了方向。