Be
careful before you push the ‘accept’ button next time while downloading
a free app that asks for permission to share your personal information
with a third party.
A
new study reports a number of smartphone users finding the frequency of
information sharing by these apps as “scary” and “unexpected”.
An
experiment at Carnegie Mellon University showed that when people learn
exactly how many times these apps share that information they rapidly
act to limit further sharing.
In
one phase of a study that evaluated the benefits of app permission
managers — software that gives people control over what sensitive
information their apps can access — 23 smartphone users received a daily
message, or “privacy nudge”, telling them how many times information
such as location, contact lists or phone call logs had been shared.
The
study used a permission manager for Android 4.3 called AppOps. Some
nudges were alarming. One notable example: “Your location has been
shared 5,398 times with Facebook, Groupon, GO Launcher EX and seven
other apps in the last 14 days.”
In
interviews, the research subjects repeatedly said the frequency of
access to their personal information caught them by surprise.
“It felt like I’m being followed by my own phone. It was scary. That number is too high,” one participant said.
“The number (356 times) was huge, unexpected,” another participant said.
“The vast majority of people have no clue about what’s going on,” said professor Norman Sadeh who supervised the study.
The
findings would be presented at CHI 2015 in April in Seoul, South Korea.
When the participants were given access to AppOps, they collectively
reviewed their app permissions 51 times and restricted 272 permissions
on 76 distinct apps.
Sadeh
said when people download an Android app, they are told what
information the app is permitted to access, but few pay much attention,
and fewer understand the implications of those permissions.
“The
fact that users respond to privacy nudges indicate that they really
care about privacy, but were just unaware of how much information was
being collected about them,” Sadeh said.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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