| A. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, 1999. |
.... The privacy of personal information on the Internet has become a major concern for governments, businesses, media, and the public [5] 12] 13] 18] 24] Opinion surveys consistently show that privacy concerns are a leading impediment to the further growth of web based commerce [10] 25] 26] [27]. Initial efforts by web sites to disclose their privacy policies have had limited impact because these policies were often too lengthy for users to read and were written in a language too difficult for users to understand. Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) developed by the World Wide Web ....
A. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, July 1999.
.... escalating increase in digital data, concerns about privacy of personal information have emerged globally [15] 17] 20] 24] Privacy issues are further exacerbated now that the internet makes it easy for the new data to be automatically collected and added to databases [10] 13] 14] 27] 28] [29]. 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 [11] 16] 20] 23] An interesting new ....
A. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, July 1999.
....Base Endowment. To copy otherwise, or to republish, requires a fee and or special permission from the Endowment. Proceedings of the 28th VLDB Conference, Hong Kong, China, 2002 that the Internet makes it easy for new data to be automatically collected and added to databases [6] 10] 58] 59] [60]. Privacy is the right of individuals to determine for themselves when, how and to what extent information about them is communicated to others. Privacy concerns are being fueled by an ever increasing list of privacy violations, ranging from privacy accidents to illegal actions. Of equal ....
A. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, July 1999.
.... 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 [CM96] The98] Off98] ....
.... mining is the development of models about aggregated data, can we develop accurate models without access to precise information in individual data records The underlying assumption is that a person will be willing to selectively divulge information in exchange of value such models can provide [Wes99] Example of the value provided include filtering to weed out unwanted information, better search results with less effort, and automatic triggers [HS99] A recent survey of web users [CRA99a] classified 17 of respondents as privacy fundamentalists who will not provide data to a web site even if ....
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A.F. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, July 1999. Available from http://www.privacyexchange.org/iss/ surveys/sr990714.html.
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A. Westin. Freebies and privacy: What net users think. Technical report, Opinion Research Corporation, 1999.
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A. Westin, Freebies andprivacy: what net users think, Technical Report, Opinion Research Corporation, July 1999.
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