Visible to the public Biblio

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2020-07-10
Reshmi, T S, Daniel Madan Raja, S.  2019.  A Review on Self Destructing Data:Solution for Privacy Risks in OSNs. 2019 5th International Conference on Advanced Computing Communication Systems (ICACCS). :231—235.

Online Social Networks(OSN) plays a vital role in our day to day life. The most popular social network, Facebook alone counts currently 2.23 billion users worldwide. Online social network users are aware of the various security risks that exist in this scenario including privacy violations and they are utilizing the privacy settings provided by OSN providers to make their data safe. But most of them are unaware of the risk which exists after deletion of their data which is not really getting deleted from the OSN server. Self destruction of data is one of the prime recommended methods to achieve assured deletion of data. Numerous techniques have been developed for self destruction of data and this paper discusses and evaluates these techniques along with the various privacy risks faced by an OSN user in this web centered world.

2020-04-20
Raber, Frederic, Krüger, Antonio.  2018.  Deriving Privacy Settings for Location Sharing: Are Context Factors Always the Best Choice? 2018 IEEE Symposium on Privacy-Aware Computing (PAC). :86–94.
Research has observed context factors like occasion and time as influential factors for predicting whether or not to share a location with online friends. In other domains like social networks, personality was also found to play an important role. Furthermore, users are seeking a fine-grained disclosement policy that also allows them to display an obfuscated location, like the center of the current city, to some of their friends. In this paper, we observe which context factors and personality measures can be used to predict the correct privacy level out of seven privacy levels, which include obfuscation levels like center of the street or current city. Our results show that a prediction is possible with a precision 20% better than a constant value. We will give design indications to determine which context factors should be recorded, and how much the precision can be increased if personality and privacy measures are recorded using either a questionnaire or automated text analysis.
Raber, Frederic, Krüger, Antonio.  2018.  Deriving Privacy Settings for Location Sharing: Are Context Factors Always the Best Choice? 2018 IEEE Symposium on Privacy-Aware Computing (PAC). :86–94.
Research has observed context factors like occasion and time as influential factors for predicting whether or not to share a location with online friends. In other domains like social networks, personality was also found to play an important role. Furthermore, users are seeking a fine-grained disclosement policy that also allows them to display an obfuscated location, like the center of the current city, to some of their friends. In this paper, we observe which context factors and personality measures can be used to predict the correct privacy level out of seven privacy levels, which include obfuscation levels like center of the street or current city. Our results show that a prediction is possible with a precision 20% better than a constant value. We will give design indications to determine which context factors should be recorded, and how much the precision can be increased if personality and privacy measures are recorded using either a questionnaire or automated text analysis.
2019-01-31
Bahirat, Paritosh, He, Yangyang, Menon, Abhilash, Knijnenburg, Bart.  2018.  A Data-Driven Approach to Developing IoT Privacy-Setting Interfaces. 23rd International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces. :165–176.

User testing is often used to inform the development of user interfaces (UIs). But what if an interface needs to be developed for a system that does not yet exist? In that case, existing datasets can provide valuable input for UI development. We apply a data-driven approach to the development of a privacy-setting interface for Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices. Applying machine learning techniques to an existing dataset of users' sharing preferences in IoT scenarios, we develop a set of "smart" default profiles. Our resulting interface asks users to choose among these profiles, which capture their preferences with an accuracy of 82%—a 14% improvement over a naive default setting and a 12% improvement over a single smart default setting for all users.