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Contextualizing interpersonal data sharing in smart homes

Contextualizing interpersonal data sharing in smart homes
Contextualizing interpersonal data sharing in smart homes
A key feature of smart home devices is monitoring the environment and recording data. These devices provide security via motion-detection video alerts, cost-savings via thermostat usage history, and peace of mind via functions like auto-locking doors or water leak detectors. At the same time, the sharing of this information in interpersonal relationships---though necessary---is currently accomplished on an all-or-nothing basis. This can easily lead to oversharing in a multi-user environment. Although prior work has studied people's perceptions of information sharing with vendors or ISPs, the sharing of household data among users who interact personally is less well understood. Interpersonal situations make data sharing much more context-based and, thus, more complicated. In this paper, we use themes from the theory of contextual integrity in an online survey (n=1,992) to study how people perceive data sharing with others in smart homes and inform future designs and research. Our results show that data recipients in a smart home can be reduced to three major groups, and data types matter more than device types. We also found that the types of access control desired by users can vary from scenario to scenario. Depending on whom they are sharing data with and about what data, participants expressed varying levels of comfort when presented with different types of access control (e.g., explicit approval versus time-limited access). Taken together, this provides strong evidence that a more dynamic access control system is needed, and we can design it in a more usable way.
2299-0984
295-312
He, Weijia
f2223ad6-d8bd-4a98-8d6b-6ca8feef0a04
Reitinger, Nathan
48bce2ef-4102-45f6-be30-4eeab525a4d9
Almogbil, Atheer
6a9812c7-7b51-4229-a5e8-47381fdd789f
Chiang, Yi-Shyuan
44fbe180-3bb9-4933-a523-779daa7c1c1b
Pierson, Timothy J.
6e6805a3-cdac-475f-af11-3820371a5dc2
Kotz, David
0346c4a6-b7e9-4bb0-b00d-20b55d0b04ba
He, Weijia
f2223ad6-d8bd-4a98-8d6b-6ca8feef0a04
Reitinger, Nathan
48bce2ef-4102-45f6-be30-4eeab525a4d9
Almogbil, Atheer
6a9812c7-7b51-4229-a5e8-47381fdd789f
Chiang, Yi-Shyuan
44fbe180-3bb9-4933-a523-779daa7c1c1b
Pierson, Timothy J.
6e6805a3-cdac-475f-af11-3820371a5dc2
Kotz, David
0346c4a6-b7e9-4bb0-b00d-20b55d0b04ba

He, Weijia, Reitinger, Nathan, Almogbil, Atheer, Chiang, Yi-Shyuan, Pierson, Timothy J. and Kotz, David (2024) Contextualizing interpersonal data sharing in smart homes. Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies, 2024 (2), 295-312. (doi:10.56553/popets-2024-0051).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A key feature of smart home devices is monitoring the environment and recording data. These devices provide security via motion-detection video alerts, cost-savings via thermostat usage history, and peace of mind via functions like auto-locking doors or water leak detectors. At the same time, the sharing of this information in interpersonal relationships---though necessary---is currently accomplished on an all-or-nothing basis. This can easily lead to oversharing in a multi-user environment. Although prior work has studied people's perceptions of information sharing with vendors or ISPs, the sharing of household data among users who interact personally is less well understood. Interpersonal situations make data sharing much more context-based and, thus, more complicated. In this paper, we use themes from the theory of contextual integrity in an online survey (n=1,992) to study how people perceive data sharing with others in smart homes and inform future designs and research. Our results show that data recipients in a smart home can be reduced to three major groups, and data types matter more than device types. We also found that the types of access control desired by users can vary from scenario to scenario. Depending on whom they are sharing data with and about what data, participants expressed varying levels of comfort when presented with different types of access control (e.g., explicit approval versus time-limited access). Taken together, this provides strong evidence that a more dynamic access control system is needed, and we can design it in a more usable way.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 July 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494786
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494786
ISSN: 2299-0984
PURE UUID: ee7bbdb5-9b2d-4565-b982-d2edc5407755
ORCID for Weijia He: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0002-1189-7063

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Date deposited: 15 Oct 2024 16:46
Last modified: 16 Oct 2024 02:15

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Contributors

Author: Weijia He ORCID iD
Author: Nathan Reitinger
Author: Atheer Almogbil
Author: Yi-Shyuan Chiang
Author: Timothy J. Pierson
Author: David Kotz

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