In the second step, we introduce Facebook use variables as covariates. The variables are number of Facebook friends, numbers of minutes spent on Facebook per day in the last week, and length of Facebook membership. The first two variables provide us intensity-of-use data, and the length
variable lets us control the effect extended use may have on privacy behaviors. In this step, we find that gender and number of Facebook friends are significant. Interpreting the odds ratio, the addition of ten Facebook friends is associated with a 1% increase in the odds of having a friends-only Facebook profile. This finding is in line with other analyses exploring the relationship between friend networks and privacy behaviors [23].
In the second step, we introduce Facebook use variables as covariates. The variables are number of Facebook friends, numbers of minutes spent on Facebook per day in the last week, and length of Facebook membership. The first two variables provide us intensity-of-use data, and the lengthvariable lets us control the effect extended use may have on privacy behaviors. In this step, we find that gender and number of Facebook friends are significant. Interpreting the odds ratio, the addition of ten Facebook friends is associated with a 1% increase in the odds of having a friends-only Facebook profile. This finding is in line with other analyses exploring the relationship between friend networks and privacy behaviors [23].
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