Exploratory Study of the Privacy Extension for System Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA-Priv) to elicit Privacy Risks in eHealth
Kai Mindermann, Frederik Riedel, Asim Abdulkhaleq, Christoph Stach,, Stefan Wagner

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of STPA-Priv, a structured privacy risk analysis method, in a real-world eHealth scenario involving a smart glucose device, highlighting its benefits and application process.
Contribution
It demonstrates how STPA-Priv can identify complex privacy risks in sociotechnical systems and discusses its iterative application supported by the XSTAMPP tool.
Findings
STPA-Priv effectively finds complex privacy risks.
The method is supported by the XSTAMPP tool.
Iterative analysis improves risk detection.
Abstract
Context: System Theoretic Process Analysis for Privacy (STPA-Priv) is a novel privacy risk elicitation method using a top down approach. It has not gotten very much attention but may offer a convenient structured approach and generation of additional artifacts compared to other methods. Aim: The aim of this exploratory study is to find out what benefits the privacy risk elicitation method STPA-Priv has and to explain how the method can be used. Method: Therefore we apply STPA-Priv to a real world health scenario that involves a smart glucose measurement device used by children. Different kinds of data from the smart device including location data should be shared with the parents, physicians, and urban planners. This makes it a sociotechnical system that offers adequate and complex privacy risks to be found. Results: We find out that STPA-Priv is a structured method for privacy analysis…
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