Authors
AJ Bernheim Brush, John Krumm, James Scott
Publication date
2010/9/26
Book
Proceedings of the 12th ACM international conference on Ubiquitous computing
Pages
95-104
Description
Long-term personal GPS data is useful for many UbiComp services such as traffic monitoring and environmental impact assessment. However, inference attacks on such traces can reveal private information including home addresses and schedules. We asked 32 participants from 12 households to collect 2 months of GPS data, and showed it to them in visualizations. We explored if they understood how their individual privacy concerns mapped onto 5 location obfuscation schemes (which they largely did), which obfuscation schemes they were most comfortable with (Mixing, Deleting data near home, and Randomizing), how they monetarily valued their location data, and if they consented to share their data publicly. 21/32 gave consent to publish their data, though most households' members shared at different levels, which indicates a lack of awareness of privacy interrelationships. Grounded in real decisions about …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202432021163012201599136952
Scholar articles