According to Burkhart & Anderson Schwarz, post-privacy “advocates the abandonment of privacy activism and personal privacy hygiene based on the conviction that digital privacy is both untenable and socially unrewarded” (p. 11). The authors try to create a manageable way to go about privacy in a post-privacy culture. It originated with Heller (2008) and Schramm (2012).
See: Privacy
References:
Jansson, A.,& Christensen, M. (Eds.). (2014). Media, surveillance and identity: Social perspective. New York: Peter Lang.