Best Paper Award for the 1st International Conference on Human Aspects of Information Security, Privacy and Trust , in the context of HCI International 2013, 21-26 July 2013, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Certificate for Best Paper Award of the 1st International Conference on Human Aspects of Information Security, Privacy and Trust
conferred to
Fuming Shih and Julia Boortz
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT)
for the paper entitled
"Understanding People's Preferences for Disclosing Contextual Information to Smartphone Apps"
Presented in the context of HCI International 2013
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
21-26 July 2013
Paper Abstract
"Smartphones have become the primary and most intimate computing devices that people rely on for their daily tasks. Sensor-based and network technologies have turned smartphones into a “context-aware” information hub and a vehicle for information exchange. These information provide apps and third party with a wealth of sensitive information to mine and profile user behavior. However, the Orwellian implications created by context-awareness technology have caused uneasiness to people when using smartphone applications and reluctance of using them [6]. To mitigate people’s privacy concerns, previous research suggests giving controls to people on how their information should be collected, accessed and shared. However, deciding who (people or the application) gets to access to what (types of information) could be an unattainable task. In order to develop appropriate applications and privacy policies it is important to understand under what circumstances people are willing to disclose information."
The full paper is available through SpringerLink, provided that you have proper access rights.