Designing mobile awareness cues
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services
Private whispers/public eyes: Is receiving highly personal information in a public place stressful?
Interacting with Computers
Who's hogging the bandwidth: the consequences of revealing the invisible in the home
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Etude exploratoire des usages d'une application sociale mobile
Conference Internationale Francophone sur I'Interaction Homme-Machine
Contextual dynamics of group-based sharing decisions
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Privacy dictionary: a linguistic taxonomy of privacy for content analysis
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Prescriptive persuasion and open-ended social awareness: expanding the design space of mobile health
Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Briefing news reporting with mobile assignments: perceptions, needs and challenges
Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Location-based crowdsourcing of hyperlocal news: dimensions of participation preferences
Proceedings of the 17th ACM international conference on Supporting group work
Participatory personal data: An emerging research challenge for the information sciences
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
What a tangled web we weave: lying backfires in location-sharing social media
Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Breaching barriers to collaboration in public spaces
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction
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Social awareness applications are based on the idea of a group sharing real-time context information via personal and ubiquitous terminals. Studies of such applications have shown that users are not only concerned with the preservation privacy through non-disclosure. Instead, disclosure is manipulated for the constant presentation of self to the group in everyday social situations. Basing on 3聽years of research with the mobile social awareness system ContextContacts, established findings in social psychology and ubiquitous computing, we propose a number of design principles to support users in this management of privacy and presentation. These principles are to apply even if disclosure is automated, and include support for lightweight permissions, assuming reciprocity, appearing differently to different audiences, providing for feedback on presentation and allowing lying. These principles are applied in interaction design and protocol engineering for the next version of a mobile awareness system called ContextContacts.