Title
Privacy Tips: Would it be ever possible to empower online social-network users to control the confidentiality of their data?
Abstract
Using the web for communication, purchases, searching information and/or socializing generates data, about ourselves, our connections and our activities, which is collected easily. In online social networks, users volunteer perhaps what is considered more personal information to their selected circles. But each person has personal preferences about what it considers public and what it considers private. The problem is that the information that is public may be used to disclose information that the users expect to remain confidential. This paper offers a path to provide tips and warnings to each user of an online social network so they can exercise control on the information they consider private not only by not disclosing such information, but by acting on their public information-items that could be informative for those information-items that are private. This is a significant challenge, because most web-applications use personalization to build a context and provide better services. We aim to raise awareness on privacy and to empower users, giving them the possibility to regulate the benefits of personalization with the privacy risks. In this paper we also show that information-items (like relationships) can be chosen as confidential, and that we can provide meaningful warnings on metrics of association and public attributes that are strong predictors of confidential information-items.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1145/2808797.2809279
ASONAM
Field
DocType
Citations 
Data mining,Internet privacy,World Wide Web,Social network,Confidentiality,Computer science,Privacy policy,Personally identifiable information,Socialization,Information privacy,Personalization
Conference
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
20
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
vladimir estivillcastro1903107.50
David F. Nettleton214516.67