No Privacy in the Electronics Repair Industry
Jason Ceci, Jonah Stegman, Hassan Khan

TL;DR
This study reveals widespread privacy violations in the electronics repair industry, highlighting the lack of safeguards for personal data and proposing stakeholder actions to improve privacy protections.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive four-part investigation into privacy breaches in electronics repair, including field studies, data collection, surveys, and interviews, revealing systemic issues.
Findings
Most providers lack privacy policies.
Technicians snoop and copy personal data.
Customers experience significant privacy violations.
Abstract
Electronics repair and service providers offer a range of services to computing device owners across North America -- from software installation to hardware repair. Device owners obtain these services and leave their device along with their access credentials at the mercy of technicians, which leads to privacy concerns for owners' personal data. We conduct a comprehensive four-part study to measure the state of privacy in the electronics repair industry. First, through a field study with 18 service providers, we uncover that most service providers do not have any privacy policy or controls to safeguard device owners' personal data from snooping by technicians. Second, we drop rigged devices for repair at 16 service providers and collect data on widespread privacy violations by technicians, including snooping on personal data, copying data off the device, and removing tracks of snooping…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection · Ethics and Social Impacts of AI · Privacy-Preserving Technologies in Data
