Abstract
This chapter introduces relevant privacy frameworks from academic literature that can be useful to practitioners and researchers who want to better understand privacy and how to apply it in their own contexts. We retrace the history of how networked privacy research first began by focusing on privacy as information disclosure. Privacy frameworks have since evolved into conceptualizing privacy as a process of interpersonal boundary regulation, appropriate information flows, designbased frameworks, and, finally, user-centered privacy that accounts for individual differences. These frameworks can be used to identify privacy needs and violations, as well as inform design. This chapter provides actionable guidelines for how these different frameworks can be applied in research, design, and product development.
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CITATION STYLE
Wisniewski, P. J., & Page, X. (2022). Privacy theories and frameworks. In Modern Socio-Technical Perspectives on Privacy (pp. 15–41). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-82786-1_2
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