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Abstract
In view of ever more emerging risks for informational privacy in the context of digital technologies, there is no doubt about a great demand for privacy literacy. Privacy literacy aims at empowering technology users. They shall learn and ultimately possess a range of competences and abilities to control personal information. In the end, they shall know how to protect their privacy online. In this article, arguments are put forward which show that the discourse on privacy literacy entails several problems. First, issues revolve around social inequalities regarding privacy literacy. People who are the most vulnerable to risks are also the least capable of becoming privacy literate. Second, the research on privacy literacy arrives at false assumptions about the supposed rationality of media users. Erroneously, it assumes that they constantly calculate risks against benefits when using online platforms and services. Third, privacy literacy is almost solely concerned with frontend features, where people can change privacy settings, remove posts, delete sensitive information, et cetera. However, this leads to a disregard of many privacy risks, which are situated in the backend of platforms. Last, the discourse on privacy literacy tacitly agrees with the circumstance that individual media users are rendered responsible for tasks, which previously have been the duty of the state. There is a transfer of responsibility from the state to the individual citizen, although the state is the only actor who is able to govern IT companies, regulate algorithms, and effectively protect the informational privacy of individual media users. They themselves cannot undertake this task, even when they are privacy literate.
Introduction
In the context of digital information and communication technologies, a range of competences and abilities are required that enable users to not only exercise control but also obtain a certain level of privacy protection. While most people stress that privacy is very important for them, they often behave in a contradictory fashion (Barnes, 2006; Taddicken, 2014). Hence, studies have shown that even though users harbor strong concerns about privacy issues, this does not necessarily affect online behavior. For example, the E-Communications Household Survey (2010) entailed participants of 27 member states of the European Union (N=26,761). Even though the great majority of participants are concerned about privacy risks stemming from personal data-collection (E-Communications...