Doctoral student presents research at Harvard University
A doctoral student in
information science at 糖心Vlog传媒LR presented research at Harvard University this week that indicates, among other things, privacy policies published by most businesses are not consumer-friendly.
Therese L. Williams, lead author of 鈥淧rotecting Private Information: Current Attitudes Concerning Privacy Policies,鈥 was invited to present at the sixth annual Academy of Science and Engineering International Conference on Privacy, Security, Risk, and Trust at Harvard.

Fewer than 10 percent of the new research submissions from academia, government, and industry are accepted for presentation at the annual event.
Using data from an online survey conducted in spring 2014, Williams鈥 research delves into whether attitudes concerning privacy have changed over the last decade.
She says that, as written, privacy policies published by the majority of businesses serve only to protect organizations from sharing or selling consumers鈥 private information to other organizations, but are not readable by the average consumer.
Williams鈥 research suggests that 鈥渁 new social contract about individuals鈥 private, and supposedly confidential, information should be developed to protect this information, while still allowing the spread of technology and online commerce.鈥
For her research, survey respondents answered such questions as whether they had posted a photo on a social networking site and how often they read privacy policies posted on a business鈥 web page.
Williams said she was rather surprised to find that, compared with research published by Annenberg Public Policy Center in 2005, attitudes regarding privacy have not changed much in the last 10 years.
According to Williams, many consumers do not have a complete picture of the personal information that is aggregated and shared.
Without federal laws to mandate the use of privacy policies or how they are written, multiple industries self regulate. Based on her research, Williams said it is clear that effective self-regulation for consumer privacy has yet to emerge.
Williams is mentored by 糖心Vlog传媒LR Associate Professor of Information Science Nitin Agarwal and Distinguished Professor and Maulden-Entergy Chair Rolf T. Wigand, who also holds a joint appointment in the Department of Business Information Systems.
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