Revealing cumulative risks in online personal information: a data narrative study

Abstract

When pieces from an individual's personal information available online are connected over time and across multiple platforms, this more complete digital trace can give unintended insights into their life and opinions. In a data narrative interview study with 26 currently employed participants, we examined risks and harms to individuals and employers when others joined the dots between their online information. We discuss the themes of visibility and self-disclosure, unintentional information leakage and digital privacy literacies constructed from our analysis. We contribute insights not only into people's difficulties in recalling and conceptualising their digital traces but of subsequently envisioning how their online information may be combined, or (re)identified across their traces and address a current gap in research by showing that awareness is lacking around the potential for personal information to be correlated by and made coherent to/by others, posing risks to individuals, employers, and even the state. We touch on inequalities of privacy, freedom and legitimacy that exist for different groups with regard to what they make (or feel compelled to make) available online and we contribute to current methodological work on the use of sketching to support visual sense making in data narrative interviews. We conclude by discussing the need for interventions that support personal reflection on the potential visibility of combined digital traces to spotlight hidden vulnerabilities and promote more proactive action about what is shared and not shared online.

Publication DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3555214
Divisions: College of Engineering & Physical Sciences > School of Computer Science and Digital Technologies > Software Engineering & Cybersecurity
College of Business and Social Sciences > Aston Institute for Forensic Linguistics
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Additional Information: Copyright © 2022 Owner/Author This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License. Funding Information: This work was sponsored by EPSRC grants EP/R033889/1, EP/R033889/2, EP/R033854/1 and EP/R033870/1.
Uncontrolled Keywords: cybersecurity,digital traces,human computer interaction,personal data,research design,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Human-Computer Interaction,Computer Networks and Communications
Publication ISSN: 2573-0142
Last Modified: 18 Nov 2024 08:34
Date Deposited: 20 Dec 2022 11:34
Full Text Link:
Related URLs: https://dl.acm. ... 10.1145/3555214 (Publisher URL)
http://www.scop ... tnerID=8YFLogxK (Scopus URL)
PURE Output Type: Article
Published Date: 2022-11-11
Accepted Date: 2022-11-01
Authors: Nicol, Emma
Briggs, Jo
Moncur, Wendy
Htait, Amal (ORCID Profile 0000-0003-4647-9996)
Carey, Daniel
Azzopardi, Leif
Schafer, Burkhard

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