Security and Privacy Perceptions of Third-Party Application Access for Google Accounts (Extended Version)
David G. Balash (1), Xiaoyuan Wu (1), Miles Grant (1), Irwin Reyes, (2), Adam J. Aviv (1) ((1) The George Washington University, (2) Two Six, Technologies)

TL;DR
This study investigates Google users' perceptions of third-party app access, revealing privacy concerns and trust factors, and suggests design improvements for managing third-party permissions to enhance security and privacy.
Contribution
The paper provides empirical data on user perceptions and actual behaviors regarding third-party app access to Google accounts, highlighting gaps and opportunities for better permission management.
Findings
Most users have authorized third-party apps and SSOs.
Users are most concerned about access to personal info like emails.
Trust in Google integrations influences user perceptions.
Abstract
Online services like Google provide a variety of application programming interfaces (APIs). These online APIs enable authenticated third-party services and applications (apps) to access a user's account data for tasks such as single sign-on (SSO), calendar integration, and sending email on behalf of the user, among others. Despite their prevalence, API access could pose significant privacy and security risks, where a third-party could have unexpected privileges to a user's account. To gauge users' perceptions and concerns regarding third-party apps that integrate with online APIs, we performed a multi-part online survey of Google users. First, we asked n = 432 participants to recall if and when they allowed third-party access to their Google account: 89% recalled using at least one SSO and 52% remembered at least one third-party app. In the second survey, we re-recruited n = 214…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection · Advanced Malware Detection Techniques · User Authentication and Security Systems
