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Conflicting privacy preference signals in the wild

Maximilian Hils, Daniel Woods, Rainer Böhme

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Abstract

Privacy preference signals allow users to express preferences over how their personal data is processed. These signals become important in determining privacy outcomes when they reference an enforceable legal basis, as is the case with recent signals such as the Global Privacy Control and the Transparency & Consent Framework. However, the coexistence of multiple privacy preference signals creates ambiguity as users may transmit more than one signal. This chapter collects evidence about ambiguity flowing from the aforementioned two signals and the historic Do Not Track signal. We provide the first empirical evidence that ambiguous signals are sent by web users in the wild. We also show that preferences stored in the browser are reliable predictors of privacy preferences expressed in web dialogs. Finally, we provide the first evidence that popular cookie dialogs are blocked by the majority of users who adopted the Do Not Track and Global Privacy Control standards. These empirical results inform forthcoming legal debates about how to interpret privacy preference signals.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationData Protection and Privacy
Subtitle of host publicationIn Transitional Times
EditorsHideyuki Matsumi, Dara Hallinan, Diana Dimitrova, Eleni Kosta, Paul De Hert
PublisherBloomsbury
Chapter4
Pages75-88
Number of pages14
Volume15
ISBN (Electronic)9781509965922
ISBN (Print)9781509965908
Publication statusPublished - 4 May 2023

Publication series

NameComputers, Privacy and Data Protection
PublisherBloomsbury

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • ADPC
  • consent
  • cookies
  • DNT
  • GDPR
  • GPC
  • TCF

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