Understanding lifelog sharing preferences of lifeloggers
Understanding lifelog sharing preferences of lifeloggers
The lifelogging activity enables users, the lifeloggers, to passively capture images using wearable cameras from a first person perspective and ultimately create a visual diary encoding every possible aspect of their life with unprecedented details. This growing phenomenon, has posed several privacy concerns for the lifeloggers (people wearing the device), and bystanders (any person who is captured in the images). In this paper, we present a user- study to understand the sharing preferences of the lifeloggers for the images captured in difference scenarios with different audience groups. Our findings motivate the need to design privacy preserving techniques, which will automatically recommend sharing decisions which will help the lifeloggers avoid misclosure, i.e. wrongly sharing a sensitive image with one or more sharing groups.
Lifelogging, Wearable cameras, Privacy, Understanding user
649-651
Chowdhury, Soumyadeb
243d04a3-126e-4ea1-a47f-29c49c6c545b
Ferdous, Md Sadek
1a77c989-cc58-4d52-920a-da9c24f20e7d
Jose, Joemon M
5f183a8d-8e54-4248-94ff-dfdf046d7592
29 November 2016
Chowdhury, Soumyadeb
243d04a3-126e-4ea1-a47f-29c49c6c545b
Ferdous, Md Sadek
1a77c989-cc58-4d52-920a-da9c24f20e7d
Jose, Joemon M
5f183a8d-8e54-4248-94ff-dfdf046d7592
Chowdhury, Soumyadeb, Ferdous, Md Sadek and Jose, Joemon M
(2016)
Understanding lifelog sharing preferences of lifeloggers.
Australian Conference on Computer-Human Interaction, , Launceston, Australia.
29 Nov - 02 Dec 2016.
.
(doi:10.1145/3010915.3011852).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
The lifelogging activity enables users, the lifeloggers, to passively capture images using wearable cameras from a first person perspective and ultimately create a visual diary encoding every possible aspect of their life with unprecedented details. This growing phenomenon, has posed several privacy concerns for the lifeloggers (people wearing the device), and bystanders (any person who is captured in the images). In this paper, we present a user- study to understand the sharing preferences of the lifeloggers for the images captured in difference scenarios with different audience groups. Our findings motivate the need to design privacy preserving techniques, which will automatically recommend sharing decisions which will help the lifeloggers avoid misclosure, i.e. wrongly sharing a sensitive image with one or more sharing groups.
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Published date: 29 November 2016
Venue - Dates:
Australian Conference on Computer-Human Interaction, , Launceston, Australia, 2016-11-29 - 2016-12-02
Keywords:
Lifelogging, Wearable cameras, Privacy, Understanding user
Organisations:
Agents, Interactions & Complexity
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 406425
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406425
PURE UUID: da18b8f0-5595-4971-8655-e19df468b4b1
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:47
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 18:05
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Contributors
Author:
Soumyadeb Chowdhury
Author:
Md Sadek Ferdous
Author:
Joemon M Jose
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