We present a small study about information disclosure and awareness of disclosure implications on Couchsurfing.com. Couchsurfing
is an online social networking site where users connect with others interested in traveling and staying at each other’s homes.
Since users are looking for someone to stay or travel with, they must develop a rapport and trust before traveling. This leads
users to share more information on their Couchsurfing profile than they ordinarily would share on mainstream social networking
sites such as Facebook or MySpace. After a survey with twenty Couchsurfing users and semi-structured interviews with nine
participants, we found participants were generally not concerned with the information they disclosed online and were not aware
of how this information could be used against them by malicious third parties. We conclude the paper with a brief discussion
of how designers and developers could utilize personas to better inform participants of the implications of their disclosure
decisions.
Keywords Social Networking - Information Disclosure - Privacy