Users usually don\u27t read privacy policies of the websites accessed. This paper presents the privacy policy of the websites in a format named Privacy Label for being similar to nutritional labels. It is presented on the standardized-table format of items of privacy policies, including governmental policies. This format was compared to the policies described as full text written in natural language based on the perception of 198 participant students of the different areas. The results indicate that the Privacy Label format facilitates users’ comprehension of the policy content and made them more aware of elements that they would usually dismiss when reading a textual privacy policy
Website Terms of Service and Privacy Policy documents are the delivery methods employed by online se...
This article reports the results of two experiments in which large, census-weighted samples of Ameri...
Natural language privacy policies have become a de facto standard to address expectations of “notice...
Earlier work has shown that consumers cannot effectively find information in privacy policies and th...
Online privacy policies are difficult to understand. Most privacy policies require a college reading...
Privacy policies are the locus where consequences concerning privacy and personal data are produced,...
Privacy policies are commonly used by service providers to notify users what information is collecte...
The aim of website's Privacy Policies is to educate consumers of a website's practices and procedure...
Privacy policies are verbose, difficult to understand, take too long to read, and may be the least-r...
Privacy policies are the main method for informing Internet users of how their data are collected an...
Posting privacy policies has become a popular practice with businesses as they seek to shield themse...
Website privacy policies often contain ambiguous language that undermines the purpose and value of p...
Abstract—The U.S. legislation at both the federal and state levels mandates certain organizations to...
The article looks at the threats accompanying online shopping, such as identity theft and aggregated...
Privacy policies are everywhere. Nearly every website you visit has one, detailing what information ...
Website Terms of Service and Privacy Policy documents are the delivery methods employed by online se...
This article reports the results of two experiments in which large, census-weighted samples of Ameri...
Natural language privacy policies have become a de facto standard to address expectations of “notice...
Earlier work has shown that consumers cannot effectively find information in privacy policies and th...
Online privacy policies are difficult to understand. Most privacy policies require a college reading...
Privacy policies are the locus where consequences concerning privacy and personal data are produced,...
Privacy policies are commonly used by service providers to notify users what information is collecte...
The aim of website's Privacy Policies is to educate consumers of a website's practices and procedure...
Privacy policies are verbose, difficult to understand, take too long to read, and may be the least-r...
Privacy policies are the main method for informing Internet users of how their data are collected an...
Posting privacy policies has become a popular practice with businesses as they seek to shield themse...
Website privacy policies often contain ambiguous language that undermines the purpose and value of p...
Abstract—The U.S. legislation at both the federal and state levels mandates certain organizations to...
The article looks at the threats accompanying online shopping, such as identity theft and aggregated...
Privacy policies are everywhere. Nearly every website you visit has one, detailing what information ...
Website Terms of Service and Privacy Policy documents are the delivery methods employed by online se...
This article reports the results of two experiments in which large, census-weighted samples of Ameri...
Natural language privacy policies have become a de facto standard to address expectations of “notice...