430 research outputs found
Information-Sharing and Privacy in Social Networks
We present a new model for reasoning about the way information is shared
among friends in a social network, and the resulting ways in which it spreads.
Our model formalizes the intuition that revealing personal information in
social settings involves a trade-off between the benefits of sharing
information with friends, and the risks that additional gossiping will
propagate it to people with whom one is not on friendly terms. We study the
behavior of rational agents in such a situation, and we characterize the
existence and computability of stable information-sharing networks, in which
agents do not have an incentive to change the partners with whom they share
information. We analyze the implications of these stable networks for social
welfare, and the resulting fragmentation of the social network
The Directed Closure Process in Hybrid Social-Information Networks, with an Analysis of Link Formation on Twitter
It has often been taken as a working assumption that directed links in
information networks are frequently formed by "short-cutting" a two-step path
between the source and the destination -- a kind of implicit "link copying"
analogous to the process of triadic closure in social networks. Despite the
role of this assumption in theoretical models such as preferential attachment,
it has received very little direct empirical investigation. Here we develop a
formalization and methodology for studying this type of directed closure
process, and we provide evidence for its important role in the formation of
links on Twitter. We then analyze a sequence of models designed to capture the
structural phenomena related to directed closure that we observe in the Twitter
data
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