‘I don't have anything to hide, but … ': the challenges and negotiations of social and mobile media privacy for non-dominant youth
Drawing from interviews and focus groups with teens in a low-income and ethnically diverse high school in central Texas, this paper explores the unique social privacy challenges and strategies of low-income and non-dominant youth. Situating the research in a broader context in which
non-dominant teens are increasingly surveilled, I demonstrate how teens manage social privacy in at least three ways. First, they negotiate liminal boundaries of what constitutes a communal or shareable mobile device, which are structured around financial constraints. Second, through nonuse,
they actively resist the ways mobile and social media reconfigure social and physical spaces. Third, they deliberately use multiple platforms as a way to cope with evolving privacy settings, social norms, and technological affordances; this is a deliberate strategy intended to resist social
convergence. Because low-income and non-dominant youth are increasingly surveilled by adults, peers, and institutions, it is imperative that they find spaces that afford greater freedom of expression, interest-based communities, and privacy.
Keywords: digital divide; mobile technology; privacy; race; social media; surveillance; teens
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: Department of Media Arts, University of North Texas, 1155 Union Circle #310589, Denton, TX, 76203-5017, USA
Publication date: 04 March 2015
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