| Using relationship to control disclosure in Awareness servers |
| Full text |
Pdf
(164 KB)
|
| Source
|
GI; Vol. 112
archive
Proceedings of Graphics Interface 2005
table of contents
Victoria, British Columbia
SESSION: Privacy and security awareness
table of contents
Pages: 145 - 152
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN ~ ISSN:0713-5424 , 1-56881-265-5
|
|
Authors
|
|
Scott Davis
|
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
|
|
Carl Gutwin
|
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
|
|
| Sponsor |
|
| Publisher |
Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society
School of Computer Science, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
|
| Bibliometrics |
Downloads (6 Weeks): 5, Downloads (12 Months): 35, Citation Count: 4
|
|
|
ABSTRACT
Awareness servers provide information about a person to help observers determine whether they are available for contact. A tradeoff exists in these systems: more sources of information, and higher fidelity in those sources, can improve people's decisions, but each increase in information reduces privacy. In this paper, we look at whether the type of relationship between the observer and the person being observed can be used to manage this tradeoff. We conducted a survey that asked people what amount of information from different sources that they would disclose to seven different relationship types. We found that in more than half of the cases, people would give different amounts of information to different relationships. We also found that the only relationship to consistently receive less information was the acquaintance -- essentially the person without a strong relationship at all. Our results suggest that awareness servers can be improved by allowing finer-grained control than what is currently available.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
Begole, J., Matsakis, N., and Tang, J., Lilsys: Inferring unavailability using sensors, Proc. ACM CSCW 2004, 511 -- 514.
|
 |
2
|
|
 |
3
|
|
 |
4
|
|
| |
5
|
|
 |
6
|
|
| |
7
|
|
 |
8
|
Debby Hindus , Mark S. Ackerman , Scott Mainwaring , Brian Starr, Thunderwire: a field study of an audio-only media space, Proceedings of the 1996 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work, p.238-247, November 16-20, 1996, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
[doi> 10.1145/240080.240262]
|
| |
9
|
Horvitz, E., Jacobs, A., and Hovel, D., Attention-Sensitive Alerting, Proc. Conf. on Uncertainty and Articial Intelligence (UAI) 1999, 305--313.
|
 |
10
|
Scott Hudson , James Fogarty , Christopher Atkeson , Daniel Avrahami , Jodi Forlizzi , Sara Kiesler , Johnny Lee , Jie Yang, Predicting human interruptibility with sensors: a Wizard of Oz feasibility study, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 05-10, 2003, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA
[doi> 10.1145/642611.642657]
|
 |
11
|
|
 |
12
|
Robert Kraut , Carmen Egido , Jolene Galegher, Patterns of contact and communication in scientific research collaboration, Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work, p.1-12, September 26-28, 1988, Portland, Oregon, United States
[doi> 10.1145/62266.62267]
|
 |
13
|
|
| |
14
|
Neustaedter, C., Greenberg, S., and Boyle, M., Blur Filtration Fails to Preserve Privacy for Home-Based Video Conferencing, ACM ToCHI, in press.
|
 |
15
|
|
 |
16
|
John C. Tang , Nicole Yankelovich , James Begole , Max Van Kleek , Francis Li , Janak Bhalodia, ConNexus to awarenex: extending awareness to mobile users, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, p.221-228, March 2001, Seattle, Washington, United States
[doi> 10.1145/365024.365105]
|
 |
17
|
|
 |
18
|
|
CITED BY 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jeff Hancock , Jeremy Birnholtz , Natalya Bazarova , Jamie Guillory , Josh Perlin , Barrett Amos, Butler lies: awareness, deception and design, Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 04-09, 2009, Boston, MA, USA
|
|