Publication | Closed Access
Preserving Privacy as Social Responsibility in Online Social Networks
41
Citations
27
References
2018
Year
NegotiationShare ContentEngineeringInformation SecurityCommunicationComputational Social SciencePrivacy AgreementsSocial MediaNegotiation ArchitecturePrivacy SystemSocial Network SecurityPrivacy-preserving CommunicationPrivacy EngineeringMechanism DesignPrivacy Enhancing TechnologyPrivacy IssueData PrivacyComputer SciencePrivacy AnonymityPrivacyData SecurityCryptographySocial ComputingBusinessSocial Responsibility
Online social networks provide an environment for their users to share content with others, where the user who shares a content item is put in charge, generally ignoring others that might be affected by it. However, a content that is shared by one user can very well violate the privacy of other users. To remedy this, ideally, all users who are related to a content should get a say in how the content should be shared. Recent approaches advocate the use of agreement technologies to enable stakeholders of a post to discuss the privacy configurations of a post. This allows related individuals to express concerns so that various privacy violations are avoided up front. Existing techniques try to establish an agreement on a single post. However, most of the time, agreement should be established over multiple posts such that the user can tolerate slight breaches of privacy in return of a right to share posts themselves in future interactions. As a result, users can help each other preserve their privacy, viewing this as their social responsibility. This article develops a reciprocity-based negotiation for reaching privacy agreements among users and introduces a negotiation architecture that combines semantic privacy rules with utility functions. We evaluate our approach over multiagent simulations with software agents that mimic users based on a user study.
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