There are many apps available for parents that are designed to help them monitor their pregnancy or child’s development. These apps require parents to share information about themselves or their children in order to utilise many of the apps’ features. However, parents remain concerned about their children’s privacy, indicating a privacy paradox between concerns and actions. The research presented here conducted an analysis of parenting apps alongside a survey of parents to determine if their concerns regarding sharing information about their children was at odds with their use of parenting apps. A survey of 75 parents found that they had strong concerns around the availability of information about their children but were using apps within which they shared this information. Parents were not giving consideration to the information requested when using apps. This should be of concern to developers given the growing awareness of users’ rights in relation to managing their data. We propose new guidelines for app developers to better protect children’s privacy and to improve trust relationships between developers and users.
CITATION STYLE
Prior, S., & Coull, N. (2020). Parents unwittingly leak their children’s data: A gdpr time bomb? In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 12210 LNCS, pp. 471–486). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50309-3_31
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