Participants in social media systems must balance many considerations when choosing what to share and with whom. Sharing with others invites certain risks, as well as potential benefits; achieving the right balance is even more critical when sharing photos, which can be particularly engaging, but potentially compromising. In this paper, we examine photo-sharing decisions as an interaction between high-level user preferences and specific features of the images being shared. Our analysis combines insights from a 96-user survey with metadata from 10.4M photos to develop a model integrating these perspectives to predict permissions settings for uploaded photos. We discuss implications, including how such a model can be applied to provide online sharing experiences that are more safe, more scalable, and more satisfying.
BibTeX
@inproceedings{2016-snap-decisions,
title = {Snap Decisions? How Users, Content, and Aesthetics Interact to Shape Photo Sharing Behaviors},
author = {Kairam, Sanjay AND Kaye, Joseph AND Guerra-Gomez, John AND Shamma, David},
booktitle = {ACM Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI)},
year = {2016},
url = {https://idl.uw.edu/papers/snap-decisions},
doi = {10.1145/2858036.2858451}
}