Verlagslink DOI: | 10.1109/ICDCSW.2014.34 | Titel: | Are Circles Communities? : A Comparative Analysis of Selective Sharing in Google+ | Sprache: | Englisch | Autorenschaft: | Brauer, Steffen Schmidt, Thomas C. |
Weitere beteiligte Einrichtungen: | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE Computer Society |
Schlagwörter: | social media analysis; social graph structure; group formation; privacy | Erscheinungsdatum: | 2014 | Verlag: | IEEE | Teil der Schriftenreihe: | IEEE 34th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems workshops (ICDCSW), 2014 : June 30, 2014 - July 3, 2014, Madrid, Spain ; proceedings | Anfangsseite: | 8 | Endseite: | 15 | Konferenz: | IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems 2014 | Zusammenfassung: | The audience of shared content in Social Media is often hard to determine. To protect users from over-sharing, several services provide a feature for grouping contacts. Communities, interest groups, and circles are common examples. In this work, we investigate the structural properties of the circles in Google+ in comparison to the well-known communities. Based on several data sets and scoring functions, we search for the specific characteristics of circles. Our findings indicate that circles indeed form a special substructure that clearly differs from community groups. While the internal connectivity of circles and communities appear fairly similar, circles admit a much enhanced intensity of external relations. Circles resemble communities to which a large number of external links have been added. Selective sharing in circles is thus less confined. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/875 | ISBN: | 978-1-4799-4180-3 978-1-4799-4181-0 978-1-4799-4182-7 |
Einrichtung: | Department Informatik Fakultät Technik und Informatik |
Dokumenttyp: | Konferenzveröffentlichung |
Enthalten in den Sammlungen: | Publications without full text |
Zur Langanzeige
Volltext ergänzen
Feedback zu diesem Datensatz
Export
Alle Ressourcen in diesem Repository sind urheberrechtlich geschützt.