Personal data from mobile apps are increasingly impacting users’ lives and privacy perceptions. However, there is a scarcity of research addressing the combination of (1) individual perceptions of mobile app privacy, (2) actual personal dataflows in apps, and (3) how such perceptions and dataflows relate to actual privacy policies and terms of use in mobile apps. To address this limitation, we conducted an innovative mixed methods study including a representative user survey in Norway, an analysis of personal dataflows in apps, and content analysis of privacy policies of 21 popular, free Android mobile apps. Our findings show that more than half the respondents in the user survey repeatedly had refrained from downloading or using apps to av...
Today we have billions of smartphone users and millions of mobile applications (apps), the Apple App...
Smartphones present many interesting opportunities for survey research, particularly through the use...
Over a third of the world's population owns a smartphone. As generic computing devices that support ...
Today's phone could be described as a charismatic tool that has the ability to keep human beings cap...
Mobile apps brought unprecedented convenience to everyday life, and nowadays, hardly any interactive...
Mobile apps are increasingly jeopardizing consumer privacy by collecting, storing, and sharing perso...
The increasing demand for mobile apps is out the current capability of mobile app developers. In add...
Consumers and organizations often rely on permissions requested during the installation of mobile ap...
To provide high quality, on demand localized and personalized services, mobile apps collect data abo...
Mobile apps are increasingly jeopardizing app users' online privacy by collecting, storing, and shar...
Data protection law, including the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), usually requires a pri...
We analyze the data collection strategies of 65,000 developers in the market for mobile applications...
by Google in the form of an unrestricted grant to the Mobile Commerce Laboratory. The authors would ...
In an era marked by ubiquitous reliance on mobile applications for nearly every need, the opacity of...
Smartphone apps have the power to monitor most of people’s private lives. Apps can permeate private ...
Today we have billions of smartphone users and millions of mobile applications (apps), the Apple App...
Smartphones present many interesting opportunities for survey research, particularly through the use...
Over a third of the world's population owns a smartphone. As generic computing devices that support ...
Today's phone could be described as a charismatic tool that has the ability to keep human beings cap...
Mobile apps brought unprecedented convenience to everyday life, and nowadays, hardly any interactive...
Mobile apps are increasingly jeopardizing consumer privacy by collecting, storing, and sharing perso...
The increasing demand for mobile apps is out the current capability of mobile app developers. In add...
Consumers and organizations often rely on permissions requested during the installation of mobile ap...
To provide high quality, on demand localized and personalized services, mobile apps collect data abo...
Mobile apps are increasingly jeopardizing app users' online privacy by collecting, storing, and shar...
Data protection law, including the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), usually requires a pri...
We analyze the data collection strategies of 65,000 developers in the market for mobile applications...
by Google in the form of an unrestricted grant to the Mobile Commerce Laboratory. The authors would ...
In an era marked by ubiquitous reliance on mobile applications for nearly every need, the opacity of...
Smartphone apps have the power to monitor most of people’s private lives. Apps can permeate private ...
Today we have billions of smartphone users and millions of mobile applications (apps), the Apple App...
Smartphones present many interesting opportunities for survey research, particularly through the use...
Over a third of the world's population owns a smartphone. As generic computing devices that support ...