Authors
Pedro Giovanni Leon, Blase Ur, Yang Wang, Manya Sleeper, Rebecca Balebako, Richard Shay, Lujo Bauer, Mihai Christodorescu, Lorrie Faith Cranor
Publication date
2013/7/24
Conference
Proceedings of the Ninth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security
Pages
7
Publisher
ACM
Description
Much of the debate surrounding online behavioral advertising (OBA) has centered on how to provide users with notice and choice. An important element left unexplored is how advertising companies' privacy practices affect users' attitudes toward data sharing. We present the results of a 2,912-participant online study investigating how facets of privacy practices---data retention, access to collected data, and scope of use---affect users' willingness to allow the collection of behavioral data. We asked participants to visit a health website, explained OBA to them, and outlined policies governing data collection for OBA purposes. These policies varied by condition. We then asked participants about their willingness to permit the collection of 30 types of information. We identified classes of information that most participants would not share, as well as classes that nearly half of participants would share. More restrictive data …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PG Leon, B Ur, Y Wang, M Sleeper, R Balebako… - Proceedings of the ninth symposium on usable privacy …, 2013