Privacy salience: Taxonomies and research opportunities

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Abstract

Privacy is a well-understood concept in the physical world, with us all desiring some escape from the public gaze. However, while individuals might recognise locking doors as protecting privacy, they have difficulty practising equivalent actions online. Privacy salience considers the tangibility of this important principle; one which is often obscured in digital environments. Through extensively surveying a range of studies, we construct the first taxonomies of privacy salience. After coding articles and identifying commonalities, we categorise works by their methodologies, platforms and underlying themes. While web browsing appears to be frequently analysed, the Internet-of-Things has received little attention. Through our use of category tuples and frequency matrices, we then explore those research opportunities which might have been over-looked. These include studies of targeted advertising and its affect on salience in social networks. It is through refining our understanding of this important topic that we can better highlight the subject of privacy.

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APA

Williams, M., Nurse, J. R. C., & Creese, S. (2016). Privacy salience: Taxonomies and research opportunities. In IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology (Vol. 498, pp. 263–278). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55783-0_18

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