Difference between revisions of "Personal Information Agent"

From MgmtWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "==Full Title or Meme== Support for a personal assistant to help users control access to their personal information. ==Context== How Much Control Are People Willing to Grant to...")
 
Line 2: Line 2:
 
Support for a personal assistant to help users control access to their personal information.
 
Support for a personal assistant to help users control access to their personal information.
 
==Context==
 
==Context==
How Much Control Are People Willing to Grant to a Personal Privacy Assistant?  
+
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's CyLab Security and Privacy Institute assessed the degree of autonomy that people would feel comfortable giving to personalized privacy assistants (PPAs).<ref>Daniel Tkacik, ''How Much Control Are People Willing to Grant to a Personal Privacy Assistant?'' (2020-06-18) Carnegie Mellon University CyLab Security and Privacy Institute https://orange.hosting.lsoft.com/trk/click?ref=znwrbbrs9_6-25b42x32309fx079946&</ref> The team surveyed users on three increasingly autonomous versions of PPAs; most participants reacted positively to the first version, which would simply let users know that devices were around them, while a few said it would make them anxious. A second version that knows users' personal privacy preferences, and makes recommendations from that information, also found wide favor, while the third PPA, which would exclude users from decision-making entirely, provoked mixed reactions. CyLab's Jessica Colnago said, "We found that people are definitely interested in having some sort of assistance like that provided by a PPA, but what that assistance looks like varies across the board. In different scenarios with different people, they want different ways of interacting with the system.”
Carnegie Mellon University CyLab Security and Privacy Institute
 
Daniel Tkacik
 
June 18, 2020
 
  
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's CyLab Security and Privacy Institute assessed the degree of autonomy that people would feel comfortable giving to personalized privacy assistants (PPAs). The team surveyed users on three increasingly autonomous versions of PPAs; most participants reacted positively to the first version, which would simply let users know that devices were around them, while a few said it would make them anxious. A second version that knows users' personal privacy preferences, and makes recommendations from that information, also found wide favor, while the third PPA, which would exclude users from decision-making entirely, provoked mixed reactions. CyLab's Jessica Colnago said, "We found that people are definitely interested in having some sort of assistance like that provided by a PPA, but what that assistance looks like varies across the board. In different scenarios with different people, they want different ways of interacting with the system.”
 
Full Article
 
  
https://orange.hosting.lsoft.com/trk/click?ref=znwrbbrs9_6-25b42x32309fx079946&
 
 
==Solutions==
 
==Solutions==
 
===Personal Smartphone Agent===
 
===Personal Smartphone Agent===
Line 16: Line 10:
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
[[Con:Privacy]]
+
[[Cataegory:Privacy]]

Revision as of 15:15, 30 June 2020

Full Title or Meme

Support for a personal assistant to help users control access to their personal information.

Context

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's CyLab Security and Privacy Institute assessed the degree of autonomy that people would feel comfortable giving to personalized privacy assistants (PPAs).[1] The team surveyed users on three increasingly autonomous versions of PPAs; most participants reacted positively to the first version, which would simply let users know that devices were around them, while a few said it would make them anxious. A second version that knows users' personal privacy preferences, and makes recommendations from that information, also found wide favor, while the third PPA, which would exclude users from decision-making entirely, provoked mixed reactions. CyLab's Jessica Colnago said, "We found that people are definitely interested in having some sort of assistance like that provided by a PPA, but what that assistance looks like varies across the board. In different scenarios with different people, they want different ways of interacting with the system.”


Solutions

Personal Smartphone Agent

Web based Agent

References

Cataegory:Privacy
  1. Daniel Tkacik, How Much Control Are People Willing to Grant to a Personal Privacy Assistant? (2020-06-18) Carnegie Mellon University CyLab Security and Privacy Institute https://orange.hosting.lsoft.com/trk/click?ref=znwrbbrs9_6-25b42x32309fx079946&