Establishing a Strong Baseline for Privacy Policy Classification

Author(s):  
Najmeh Mousavi Nejad ◽  
Pablo Jabat ◽  
Rostislav Nedelchev ◽  
Simon Scerri ◽  
Damien Graux
Keyword(s):  
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry DeYoung ◽  
Deepak Garg ◽  
Limin Jia ◽  
Dilsun Kaynar ◽  
Anupam Datta

2021 ◽  
Vol 1779 (1) ◽  
pp. 012028
Author(s):  
Ahmad Taufik Hidayat ◽  
Sudarman Sudarman ◽  
Alfurqan Alfurqan ◽  
Taufiqurrahman ◽  
Sefri Doni

Author(s):  
Soon Ae Chun ◽  
Janice Warner ◽  
Angelos D. Keromytis
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Yousra Javed ◽  
Elham Al Qahtani ◽  
Mohamed Shehab

Privacy compliance of the Middle East’s financial sector has been relatively unexplored. This paper evaluates the privacy compliance and readability of privacy statements for top banks and mobile money services in the Middle East. Our analysis shows that, overall, Middle Eastern banks have better privacy policy availability and language distribution, and are more privacy compliant compared to mobile money services. However, both the banks and mobile money services need to improve (1) compliance with the principles of children/adolescent’s data protection, accountability and enforcement, and data minimization/retention, and (2) privacy statement texts to be comprehensible for a reader with ~8 years of education or less.


2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Cockcroft ◽  
Saphira Rekker

Author(s):  
Shuang Liu ◽  
Baiyang Zhao ◽  
Renjie Guo ◽  
Guozhu Meng ◽  
Fan Zhang ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Bailing Liu ◽  
Paul A. Pavlou ◽  
Xiufeng Cheng

Companies face a trade-off between creating stronger privacy protection policies for consumers and employing more sophisticated data collection methods. Justice-driven privacy protection outlines a method to manage this trade-off. We built on the theoretical lens of justice theory to integrate justice provision with two key privacy protection features, negotiation and active-recommendation, and proposed an information technology (IT) solution to balance the trade-off between privacy protection and consumer data collection. In the context of mobile banking applications, we prototyped a theory-driven IT solution, referred to as negotiation, active-recommendation privacy policy application, which enables customer service agents to interact with and actively recommend personalized privacy policies to consumers. We benchmarked our solution through a field experiment relative to two conventional applications: an online privacy statement and a privacy policy with only a simple negotiation feature. The results showed that the proposed IT solution improved consumers’ perceived procedural justice, interactive justice, and distributive justice and increased their psychological comfort in using our application design and in turn reduced their privacy concerns, enhanced their privacy awareness, and increased their information disclosure intentions and actual disclosure behavior in practice. Our proposed design can provide consumers better privacy protection while ensuring that consumers voluntarily disclose personal information desirable for companies.


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