Im März hatte ich bereits darauf hingewiesen: Im DFG-geförderten “Young Scholars Network on Privacy and Web 2.0“ ist der Sammelband „Privacy Online. Perspectives on Privacy and Self-Disclosure in the Social Web“ entstanden. Wie das stolz fotografierte Belegexemplar demonstriert, ist der Band nun auch gedruckt erhältlich – tolle Sache, herzlichen Dank an der Stelle auch an Sabine Trepte und Leonard Reinecke, die ein tolles Herausgeber-Team waren.
Mein eigener Beitrag ist weiterhin als preprint online verfügbar. In fertiger Form ist er unter http://www.springerlink.com zu finden:
Schmidt, Jan-Hinrik (2011): (Micro)Blogs: Practices of Privacy Management. In: Trepte, Sabine / Leonard Reinecke (Eds.): Privacy Online. Heidelberg: Springer. 159-173.
Und hier nochmal der Abstract:
This paper examines the ways users of (micro-)blogs navigate the boundaries between the private and the public. Various studies show that authenticity and subjectivity are dominant ideals for selecting and presenting content within blog-based personal publics, and that (micro-)blog authors share routines and expectations of “writing about oneself”, influencing the range of personal information shared as well as the specific ways of presenting these personal information to an imagined audience. This paper discusses the sociotechnical development, that is: the evolution of both tools and practices, from the rather static personal homepages of online diaries to distributed conversation of the blogosphere and to the constant and near-live streams and feeds of current (micro-)blogging within articulated social networks. This evolving communicative architecture, it is argued, affords the emergence of personal publics, where user share information of personal relevance with an audience consisting of strong and weak ties to engage in conversation.