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The Public Domain: Surveillance in Everyday Life
2012
Surveillance & Society
People create profiles on social network sites and Twitter accounts against the background of an audience. This paper argues that closely examining content created by others and looking at one's own content through other people's eyes, a common part of social media use, should be framed as social surveillance. While social surveillance is distinguished from traditional surveillance along three axes (power, hierarchy, and reciprocity), its effects and behavior modification is common to
doi:10.24908/ss.v9i4.4342
fatcat:imm5ghnkgjaivli4mr6a7ovtwe