TY - JOUR
T1 - The Privacy Paradox by Proxy
T2 - Considering Predictors of Sharenting
AU - Bhroin, Niamh N.I.
AU - Dinh, Thuy
AU - Thiel, Kira
AU - Lampert, Claudia
AU - Staksrud, Elisabeth
AU - Ólafsson, Kjartan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal data online, many parents paradoxically share pictures and information about their children themselves, a practice called sharenting. In this article we utilise data from the EU Kids Online survey to investigate this paradox. We examine both how individual characteristics such as demographics and digital skills, and relational factors, including parental mediation styles, concerns about children’s privacy, and communication between parents and children influence sharenting practices. Counter‐intuitively, our findings show that parents with higher levels of digital skills are more likely to engage in sharenting. Furthermore, parents who actively mediate their children’s use of the internet and are more concerned about the privacy of their children, are also more likely to engage in sharenting. At the same time, and further emphasising the complexities of this relational practice, many parents do not ask for their children’s consent in advance of sharing information about them. Overall, parents seem to consider the social benefits of sharenting to outweigh the potential risks both for themselves and for their children. Given the paradoxical complexities of sharenting practices, we propose further research is required to distinguish between different kinds of sharenting and their potential implications for children and young people’s right to privacy.
AB - Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal data online, many parents paradoxically share pictures and information about their children themselves, a practice called sharenting. In this article we utilise data from the EU Kids Online survey to investigate this paradox. We examine both how individual characteristics such as demographics and digital skills, and relational factors, including parental mediation styles, concerns about children’s privacy, and communication between parents and children influence sharenting practices. Counter‐intuitively, our findings show that parents with higher levels of digital skills are more likely to engage in sharenting. Furthermore, parents who actively mediate their children’s use of the internet and are more concerned about the privacy of their children, are also more likely to engage in sharenting. At the same time, and further emphasising the complexities of this relational practice, many parents do not ask for their children’s consent in advance of sharing information about them. Overall, parents seem to consider the social benefits of sharenting to outweigh the potential risks both for themselves and for their children. Given the paradoxical complexities of sharenting practices, we propose further research is required to distinguish between different kinds of sharenting and their potential implications for children and young people’s right to privacy.
KW - children online
KW - children’s digital rights
KW - Europe
KW - parental mediation
KW - privacy paradox
KW - sharenting
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85131329930&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17645/mac.v10i1.4858
DO - 10.17645/mac.v10i1.4858
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85131329930
SN - 2183-2439
VL - 10
SP - 371
EP - 383
JO - Media and Communication
JF - Media and Communication
IS - 1
ER -