Identity inference as a privacy risk in computer-mediated communication

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Date

4-3-2009

Abstract

New Web 2.0 applications, with their emphasis on collaboration and communication, hold the promise of major advances in social connectivity and coordination; however, they also increase the threats to user privacy. An important, yet under-researched privacy risk results from social inferences about user identity, location, and activities. In this paper, we frame the 'social inference problem'. We then present the results from a 292 subject experiment that highlights: 1) the prevalence of social inference risks; 2) people's difficulties in accurately predicting social inference risks; and 3) the relation between information entropy and social inference. We also show how to predict possible social inferences by modeling users' background knowledge and calculating information entropy and discuss how social inference support systems can be deployed that protect user privacy. © 2009 IEEE.

Identifier

78650760824 (Scopus)

ISBN

[9780769534503]

Publication Title

Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences Hicss

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1109/HICSS.2009.243

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