The ever increasing amount of data on people's smartphones often contains private information of others that people interact with via the device. As a result, one user's decisions regarding app permissions can expose the information of other users. However, research typically focuses on consequences of privacy-related decisions only for those who make the decisions. Work on the impact of these decisions on the privacy of others is still relatively scant. We fill this gap with an online study that extends prior work on interdependent privacy in social networking sites to the context of smartphone permissions. Our findings indicate that people typically give less consideration to the implications of their actions for the privacy of others, compared to the impact on themselves. However, we found that priming people with information that features others can help reduce this discrepancy. We apply this insight to offer suggestions for enhancing permission-specification interfaces and system architectures to accommodate interdependent privacy.
https://doi.org/10.1145/3479581
The 24th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing