Proceedings Article10.1145/1572532.1572538
A "nutrition label" for privacy
Patrick Gage Kelley,Joanna Bresee,Lorrie Faith Cranor,Robert W. Reeder +3 more
- 15 Jul 2009
- pp 4
TL;DR: The study results demonstrate that compared to existing natural language privacy policies, the proposed privacy label allows participants to find information more quickly and accurately, and provides a more enjoyable information seeking experience.
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Abstract: We used an iterative design process to develop a privacy label that presents to consumers the ways organizations collect, use, and share personal information. Many surveys have shown that consumers are concerned about online privacy, yet current mechanisms to present website privacy policies have not been successful. This research addresses the present gap in the communication and understanding of privacy policies, by creating an information design that improves the visual presentation and comprehensibility of privacy policies. Drawing from nutrition, warning, and energy labeling, as well as from the effort towards creating a standardized banking privacy notification, we present our process for constructing and refining a label tuned to privacy. This paper describes our design methodology; findings from two focus groups; and accuracy, timing, and likeability results from a laboratory study with 24 participants. Our study results demonstrate that compared to existing natural language privacy policies, the proposed privacy label allows participants to find information more quickly and accurately, and provides a more enjoyable information seeking experience.
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Citations
Understanding the privacy design space for personal connected objects
Alessandro Montanari,Afra Mashhadi,Akhil Mathur,Fahim Kawsar +3 more
- 11 Jul 2016
TL;DR: The results show that users are primarily concerned with the "Data Ownership" (i.e., who owns the data), when interacting with connected objects, and suggest the need for an intuitive tool that can minimise the cognitive distance between users' mental model and the functionalities offered by connected objects.
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日本妊娠高血圧学会
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: Offering an effective and easy-to-use returns procedure can give consumers the confidence to make a purchase in the knowledge that they can send back any items that fall short of their expectations.
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Sunlight or sunburn: a survey of attitudes toward online availability of US public records
TL;DR: Findings from a survey of 134 residents of the US Pacific Northwest on their awareness of and attitudes towards online access to political campaign records and real estate transaction histories are reported, bringing to light some of the social implications of technological changes that increase ease of access to public records.
What Do Online Behavioral Advertising Disclosures Communicate to Users? (CMU-CyLab-12-008)
Pedro Giovanni Leon,Justin Cranshaw,Lorrie Faith Cranor,Jim Graves,Manoj Hastak,Guzi Xu +5 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted an online study to investigate Internet users' perceptions of online behavioral advertising disclosures while performing an online task, and found that participants incorrectly believed that ads would pop up if they clicked on disclosure icons and taglines, and more participants incorrectly thought that clicking the disclosures would let them purchase their own advertisements than correctly understood that they could then opt out of OBA.
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Privacy Policy Specification Framework for Addressing End-Users’ Privacy Requirements
Nazila Gol Mohammadi,Jens Leicht,Nelufar Ulfat-Bunyadi,Maritta Heisel +3 more
- 26 Aug 2019
TL;DR: A conceptual model and a proof of concept for the privacy policy specification framework that empowers end-users’ when using online services and instead of having to accept predefined privacy policies, end- users can define their privacy preferences and adjust the applied privacy policy for a specific service.
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