Abstract
China, like the United States, has no defined concept of privacy in its Constitution and Chinese citizens have to work out how to negotiate their presence online, just as others elsewhere do. Online privacy in China has not received strong legislative protection compared with the U.S. and European countries as privacy has never written as an individual right in China’s Constitution, nor in the Civil Law. Chinese privacy perceptions and everyday privacy practices in social media have not been fully examined. This article presents an original, ethnographic study of how 26 Chinese youth, men and women, and 25 older rural women from Changsha, south-central China are negotiating what counts as privacy online in their everyday practices. It finds out that youth group in Changsha has a stronger understanding of the technical level of deployment of the social media technologies, enacting both positive and protective self-presentation instantiated by “human flesh search,” “public online privacy,” and “improved firewall.” However, the notion of shameful secrets touches on the protection of the reputation of those concerned, and social relationships play an important role in privacy boundary negotiation, common to both groups. This demonstrates that sociocultural contexts need to be taken into consideration and should be more nuancedly examined when studying online privacy and working out privacy protection methods.
Highlights
Stuff that I’ve shared publicly in social media is under my screening
Students took it for granted that they had completely lost control of their online privacy they had taken a range of precautions to protect it
Answering the researcher with the rhetorical question, “Online privacy? (I) feel there is already no privacy already no privacy,” Xiaohao was very critical of the situation of online privacy
Summary
Stuff that I’ve shared publicly in social media is under my screening. My name, my contacts, aren’t these privacy? Some people are not willing to [disclose their] mobile phone number; it is quite annoying when others send me harassing messages. Instead, it is those things that disgrace you . I don’t want people to know anything about my defeat . Online privacy does not represent unwilling . For example, this is my privacy, but it doesn’t mean I don’t want to share it. It is those things that disgrace you . . . I don’t want people to know anything about my defeat . . . Online privacy does not represent unwilling . . . for example, this is my privacy, but it doesn’t mean I don’t want to share it. (Xiaolei, participant)
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