The impact of timing on the salience of smartphone app privacy notices

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Abstract

In a series of experiments, we examined how the timing impacts the salience of smartphone app privacy notices. In a web survey and a field experiment, we isolated different timing conditions for displaying privacy notices: in the app store, when an app is started, during app use, and after app use. Participants installed and played a history quiz app, either virtually or on their phone. After a distraction or delay they were asked to recall the privacy notice's content. Recall was used as a proxy for the attention paid to and salience of the notice. Showing the notice during app use significantly increased recall rates over showing it in the app store. In a follow-up web survey, we tested alternative app store notices, which improved recall but did not perform as well as notices shown during app use. The results suggest that even if a notice contains information users care about, it is unlikely to be recalled if only shown in the app store.

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APA

Balebako, R., Schaub, F., Adjerid, I., Acquisti, A., & Cranor, L. F. (2015). The impact of timing on the salience of smartphone app privacy notices. In SPSM 2015 - Proceedings of the 5th Annual ACM CCS Workshop on Security and Privacy in Smartphones and Mobile Devices, co-located with: CCS 2015 (pp. 63–74). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/2808117.2808119

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