"Am I Private and If So, how Many?" -- Using Risk Communication Formats for Making Differential Privacy Understandable

April 08, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Daniel Franzen, Saskia NuΓ±ez von Voigt, Peter SΓΆrries, Florian Tschorsch, Claudia MΓΌller-Birn arXiv ID 2204.04061 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.CY Citations 9 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Mobility data is essential for cities and communities to identify areas for necessary improvement. Data collected by mobility providers already contains all the information necessary, but privacy of the individuals needs to be preserved. Differential privacy (DP) defines a mathematical property which guarantees that certain limits of privacy are preserved while sharing such data, but its functionality and privacy protection are difficult to explain to laypeople. In this paper, we adapt risk communication formats in conjunction with a model for the privacy risks of DP. The result are privacy notifications which explain the risk to an individual's privacy when using DP, rather than DP's functionality. We evaluate these novel privacy communication formats in a crowdsourced study. We find that they perform similarly to the best performing DP communications used currently in terms of objective understanding, but did not make our participants as confident in their understanding. We also discovered an influence, similar to the Dunning-Kruger effect, of the statistical numeracy on the effectiveness of some of our privacy communication formats and the DP communication format used currently. These results generate hypotheses in multiple directions, for example, toward the use of risk visualization to improve the understandability of our formats or toward adaptive user interfaces which tailor the risk communication to the characteristics of the reader.
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