There is a growing body of literature exploring privacy behaviors in social network sites. Acquisti and Gross' study of privacy behaviors in Facebook revealed a disconnect between stated privacy attitudes and observed behaviors; individuals reported concern for privacy, but disclosed large amounts of information in the network [3]. Acquisti and Gross theorize that privacy is a function of one's audience,and in the case of Facebook, an imagined audience constructed of others who view the profile. Tufekci's [32] analysis models the effect of imagined audience perception on disclosure behaviors, finding a significant negative association between unwanted profile gaze and maintaining a publicly-viewable profile across social network sites.