We conducted a questionnaire-based study of the relative importance
of two factors, inquirer and situation, in determining the preferred
accuracy of personal information disclosed through a ubiquitous computing
system. We found that privacy preferences varied by inquirer more
than by situation. That is, individuals were more likely to apply
the same privacy preferences to the same inquirer in different situations
than to apply the same privacy preferences to different inquirers
in the same situation. We are applying these results to the design
of a user interface for managing everyday privacy in ubiquitous computing.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 LeMD03-Wwt
%A Lederer, Scott
%A Mankoff, Jennifer
%A Dey, Anind K.
%B CHI '03 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems
%C Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA
%D 2003
%I ACM
%K Ubiquitous_Computing empirical_methods hand_held_devices_and_mobile_computing masterarbeit quantitative smart_environments social_and_legal_issues
%P 724--725
%R 10.1145/765891.765952
%T Who wants to know what when? privacy preference determinants in
ubiquitous computing
%U http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=765952
%X We conducted a questionnaire-based study of the relative importance
of two factors, inquirer and situation, in determining the preferred
accuracy of personal information disclosed through a ubiquitous computing
system. We found that privacy preferences varied by inquirer more
than by situation. That is, individuals were more likely to apply
the same privacy preferences to the same inquirer in different situations
than to apply the same privacy preferences to different inquirers
in the same situation. We are applying these results to the design
of a user interface for managing everyday privacy in ubiquitous computing.
%@ 1-58113-637-4
@inproceedings{LeMD03-Wwt,
abstract = {We conducted a questionnaire-based study of the relative importance
of two factors, inquirer and situation, in determining the preferred
accuracy of personal information disclosed through a ubiquitous computing
system. We found that privacy preferences varied by inquirer more
than by situation. That is, individuals were more likely to apply
the same privacy preferences to the same inquirer in different situations
than to apply the same privacy preferences to different inquirers
in the same situation. We are applying these results to the design
of a user interface for managing everyday privacy in ubiquitous computing.},
added-at = {2010-06-13T21:13:32.000+0200},
address = {Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, {USA}},
author = {Lederer, Scott and Mankoff, Jennifer and Dey, Anind K.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23ae9e094431ec62b0aa4f1fa1d210102/pilpul},
booktitle = {{CHI} '03 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems},
description = {Masterarbeit},
doi = {10.1145/765891.765952},
interhash = {1f50f7e851810157e6681dae448436cb},
intrahash = {3ae9e094431ec62b0aa4f1fa1d210102},
isbn = {1-58113-637-4},
keywords = {Ubiquitous_Computing empirical_methods hand_held_devices_and_mobile_computing masterarbeit quantitative smart_environments social_and_legal_issues},
pages = {724--725},
publisher = {{ACM}},
shorttitle = {Who wants to know what when?},
timestamp = {2010-06-13T21:13:33.000+0200},
title = {{Who wants to know what when? privacy preference determinants in
ubiquitous computing}},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=765952},
year = 2003
}