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
LPL Personal Privacy Policy User Interface: Design and Evaluation
Armin Gerl,Florian Prey +1 more
- 01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: The LPL Personal Privacy Policy User Interface (LPL PPP UI) is presented, intended to inform Data Subjects about the contents of the privacy policy and to allow personalisation of purposes to support free and informed consent.
6
Evaluating the Effect of Justification and Confidence Information on User Perception of a Privacy Policy Summarization Tool.
Vanessa Bracamonte,Seira Hidano,Welderufael B. Tesfay,Shinsaku Kiyomoto +3 more
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: It is suggested that presenting a justification of the results, in the form of a policy fragment, can increase intention to use the tool and improve perception of trustworthiness and usefulness and their implications for the design of privacy policy summarization tools.
5
Communicating software agreement content using narrative pictograms
Matthew Kay,Michael Terry +1 more
- 10 Apr 2010
TL;DR: This work presents example diagrams designed to describe the data collection policies of research software, and the composition rules used to create them, and results from an evaluation based on the ISO 9186-1 test for graphical symbols.
Final HCI Research Report
Cornelia Graf,Christina Hochleitner,Peter Wolkerstorfer,Julio Angulo,Simone Fischer-Hübner,Erik Wästlund,Benjamin Kellermann,Ronald Leenes +7 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: This deliverable provides an overview of recent results of Activity 4 ‘Usability’ of PrimeLif e, where an emphasis is put on those results, which have not been reported in the same detail in other HCI-related PrimeLife deliverables yet.
5
Beyond Avoidance and Passivity: Novel UIs to Make Terms of Service Comprehensible
Lee Taber,Paul May,Keane Yahn-Krafft,Steve Whittaker +3 more
- 25 Apr 2020
TL;DR: Alternative ways of presenting existing ToS documents using crowdsourced sentiment highlighting, to make documents more readable are designed, finding that participants recognized highlighted information better, and most participants praised the visualization.
5
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