| C. Hine and J. Eve. Privacy in the marketplace. The Information Society, 42(2):56--59, 1998. |
.... In tandem with this dramatic increase in digital data, concerns about informational privacy have emerged globally [Tim97] Eco99] eu998] Off98] Privacy issues are further exacerbated now that the World Wide Web makes it easy for the new data to be automatically collected and added to databases [HE98] Wes98a] Wes98b] Wes99] CRA99a] Cra99b] The concerns over massive collection of data are naturally extending to analytic tools applied to data. Data mining, with its promise to efficiently discover valuable, non obvious information from large databases, is particularly vulnerable to misuse ....
....[Wes98b] Wes99] CRA99a] Cra99b] The concerns over massive collection of data are naturally extending to analytic tools applied to data. Data mining, with its promise to efficiently discover valuable, non obvious information from large databases, is particularly vulnerable to misuse [CM96] The98] Off98] ECB99] A fruitful direction for future research in data mining will be the development of techniques that incorporate privacy concerns [Agr99] Specifically, we address the following question. Since the primary task in data mining is the development of models about aggregated data, ....
C. Hine and J. Eve. Privacy in the marketplace. The Information Society, 42(2):56--59, 1998.
....interactions. For example, Westin (Harris 1998) found 81 of Net users are concerned about threats to their privacy while online. While many studies have measured the magnitude of privacy concerns, it is still critical to study the concern in detail, especially for the online environment. As Hine and Eve (1998) point out: Despite this wide range of interests in privacy as a topic, we have little idea of the ways in which people in their ordinary lives conceive of privacy and their reactions to the collection and use of personal information (Hine and Eve 1998, 253) With this study, we have tried to ....
....especially for the online environment. As Hine and Eve (1998) point out: Despite this wide range of interests in privacy as a topic, we have little idea of the ways in which people in their ordinary lives conceive of privacy and their reactions to the collection and use of personal information (Hine and Eve 1998, 253) With this study, we have tried to better understand the nature of online privacy concerns; we look beyond the fact that people are concerned and attempt to understand what aspects of the problem they are most concerned about. We hope our results will help inform both policy decisions as ....
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Hine, Christine and Juliet Eve (1998). Privacy in the marketplace. The Information Society 14(4):253-262.
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