How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences

The widespread adoption of social computing applications is transforming our world. It has changed the way we routinely communicate and navigate our environment and enabled political revolutions. However, despite these applications’ ability to support social action, their use puts individual privacy...

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Main Authors: Sara Motahari, Julia Mayer, Quentin Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Alliance for Innovation (EAI) 2016-01-01
Series:EAI Endorsed Transactions on Security and Safety
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/trans.sesa.2011.e3
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spelling doaj-a86ad54c7d3e47c1b9eca09720fe18ed2020-11-24T21:47:55ZengEuropean Alliance for Innovation (EAI)EAI Endorsed Transactions on Security and Safety2032-93932016-01-011111310.4108/trans.sesa.2011.e3How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferencesSara Motahari0Julia Mayer1Quentin Jones2New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, NJ 07103-3513, USA; Sara.gatmir-motahari@sprint.comNew Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, NJ 07103-3513, USANew Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, NJ 07103-3513, USAThe widespread adoption of social computing applications is transforming our world. It has changed the way we routinely communicate and navigate our environment and enabled political revolutions. However, despite these applications’ ability to support social action, their use puts individual privacy at considerable risk. This is in large part due to the fact that the public sharing of personal information through social computing applications enables potentially unwanted inferences about users’ identity, location, or other related personal information. This paper provides a systematic overview of the social inference problem. It highlights the public’s and research community’s general lack of awareness of the problem and associated risks to user privacy. A social inference risk prediction framework is presented and associated empirical studies that attest to its validity. This framework is then used to outline the major research and practical challenges that need to be addressed if we are to deploy effective social inference protection systems. Challenges examined include how to address the computational complexity of social inference risk modeling and designing user interfaces that inform users about social inference opportunities.http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/trans.sesa.2011.e3inference problemprivacysocial computingubiquitous computing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Motahari
Julia Mayer
Quentin Jones
spellingShingle Sara Motahari
Julia Mayer
Quentin Jones
How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
EAI Endorsed Transactions on Security and Safety
inference problem
privacy
social computing
ubiquitous computing
author_facet Sara Motahari
Julia Mayer
Quentin Jones
author_sort Sara Motahari
title How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
title_short How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
title_full How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
title_fullStr How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
title_full_unstemmed How did you know that about me? Protecting users against unwanted inferences
title_sort how did you know that about me? protecting users against unwanted inferences
publisher European Alliance for Innovation (EAI)
series EAI Endorsed Transactions on Security and Safety
issn 2032-9393
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The widespread adoption of social computing applications is transforming our world. It has changed the way we routinely communicate and navigate our environment and enabled political revolutions. However, despite these applications’ ability to support social action, their use puts individual privacy at considerable risk. This is in large part due to the fact that the public sharing of personal information through social computing applications enables potentially unwanted inferences about users’ identity, location, or other related personal information. This paper provides a systematic overview of the social inference problem. It highlights the public’s and research community’s general lack of awareness of the problem and associated risks to user privacy. A social inference risk prediction framework is presented and associated empirical studies that attest to its validity. This framework is then used to outline the major research and practical challenges that need to be addressed if we are to deploy effective social inference protection systems. Challenges examined include how to address the computational complexity of social inference risk modeling and designing user interfaces that inform users about social inference opportunities.
topic inference problem
privacy
social computing
ubiquitous computing
url http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/trans.sesa.2011.e3
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