Privacy-Preserving Behaviour of Chatbot Users: Steering Through Trust Dynamics

November 26, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Julia Ive, Vishal Yadav, Mariia Ignashina, Matthew Rand, Paulina Bondaronek arXiv ID 2411.17589 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Citations 2 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Introduction: The use of chatbots is becoming increasingly important across various aspects of daily life. However, the privacy concerns associated with these communications have not yet been thoroughly addressed. The aim of this study was to investigate user awareness of privacy risks in chatbot interactions, the privacy-preserving behaviours users practice, and how these behaviours relate to their awareness of privacy threats, even when no immediate threat is perceived. Methods: We developed a novel "privacy-safe" setup to analyse user behaviour under the guarantees of anonymization and non-sharing. We employed a mixed-methods approach, starting with the quantification of broader trends by coding responses, followed by conducting a qualitative content analysis to gain deeper insights. Results: Overall, there was a substantial lack of understanding among users about how chatbot providers handle data (27% of the participants) and the basics of privacy risks (76% of the participants). Older users, in particular, expressed fears that chatbot providers might sell their data. Moreover, even users with privacy knowledge do not consistently exhibit privacy-preserving behaviours when assured of transparent data processing by chatbots. Notably, under-protective behaviours were observed among more expert users. Discussion: These findings highlight the need for a strategic approach to enhance user education on privacy concepts to ensure informed decision when interacting with chatbot technology. This includes the development of tools to help users monitor and control the information they share with chatbots
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