"I'm not for sale" -- Perceptions and limited awareness of privacy risks by digital natives about location data
Antoine Boutet, Victor Morel

TL;DR
This study investigates young adults' perceptions, awareness, and behaviors regarding location data privacy, revealing risky practices and potential for improved privacy education through transparency tools.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of digital natives' privacy awareness and behaviors concerning location data, highlighting gaps and potential interventions.
Findings
54% underestimate app permissions
33% do not revoke data access
57% are surprised by inferred information
Abstract
Although mobile devices benefit users in their daily lives in numerous ways, they also raise several privacy concerns. For instance, they can reveal sensitive information that can be inferred from location data. This location data is shared through service providers as well as mobile applications. Understanding how and with whom users share their location data -- as well as users' perception of the underlying privacy risks --, are important notions to grasp in order to design usable privacy-enhancing technologies. In this work, we perform a quantitative and qualitative analysis of smartphone users' awareness, perception and self-reported behavior towards location data-sharing through a survey of n=99 young adult participants (i.e., digital natives). We compare stated practices with actual behaviors to better understand their mental models, and survey participants' understanding of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection · Privacy-Preserving Technologies in Data
Methodstravel james
