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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/4433

Title: Facebook "Friends": How Online Identities Impact Offline Relationships
Authors: Vitak, Jessica
Issue Date: 14-Jun-2008
Abstract: We live in an increasingly networked world. We are connected to each other through numerous types of ties, with social networking sites offering one of the most popular methods people currently employ to link themselves together. But do "old-fashioned" ways of developing and maintaining relationships suffer from the evolution of computer-mediated communication? Have we become too reliant on the instantaneous, answer-producing quality of the internet that can reveal others' most intimate personal details before we even introduce ourselves? This thesis examines social relationships online to see how they differ from traditional offline relationships, focusing on how people create an online identity and how that identity affects the formation and maintenance of "friendships" in the digital world. The thesis will then consider how the social networking site Facebook impacts relationships in the real world. This analysis will be based on a survey of 644 Georgetown University undergraduates regarding their uses of various technologies to interact with different members of their social networks, and especially their use of Facebook to form and maintain relationships.
URI to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/4433
Appears in Collections:Communication, Culture, and Technology (GT-ETD)

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