Title
LYLO – Exploring Disclosed Configurations for Inter-Personal Location Sharing
Abstract
BSTRACT Continuous location sharing (CLS) can foster intimacy, for example, for couples in long-distance relationships. However, turning off CLS can then raise suspicions. To address this, we developed nuanced sharing settings in a focus group (N = 6) and implemented them to moderate CLS in an Android app. Crucially, the app also discloses each person’s current sharing settings to the partner. In a 16-day field study, four couples interacted with our app and the disclosed configurations, confirming the disclosure’s positive effect on transparency. However, features obfuscating the location were considered superfluous, as participants preferred sharing their location exactly or not at all. While participants overall appreciated having the configuration options, changes in their partners’ configurations raised questions about their motivations. Instead, participants would adjust the configuration for different intimacy levels (colleague vs. partner) rather than different activities when using CLS with the same person.
Year
DOI
Venue
2021
10.1145/3411763.3451652
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Keywords
DocType
Citations 
continuous location sharing, disclosed configurations, data protection, privacy, transparency
Conference
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Christina Schneegass105.75
Diana Irmscher200.34
Florian Bemmann312.04
Daniel Buschek416328.13