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WEB BROWSER PRIVACY & SECURITY Nan Li Informed Consent in the Mozilla Browser: Implementing Value-Sensitive Design 10/13/2009 08-534 Usability Privacy and Security

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Informed Consent in the Mozilla Browser: Implementing Value-Sensitive Design. Web Browser Privacy & Security. Nan Li. Agenda. Value-Sensitive Design (VSD) Criteria and issues of informed consent online Redesign goals and strategies Different prototypes and their evaluation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Web Browser Privacy & Security

WEB BROWSER PRIVACY & SECURITY

Nan Li

Informed Consent in the Mozilla Browser:Implementing Value-Sensitive Design

10/13/2009

08-534 Usability Privacy and Security

Page 2: Web Browser Privacy & Security

08-534 Usability Privacy and Security

2

Agenda Value-Sensitive Design (VSD) Criteria and issues of informed consent

online Redesign goals and strategies Different prototypes and their evaluation Usability test and results Discussion

10/13/2009

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Conceptual

Investigation

Technical Investiga

tion

Empirical Investiga

tion

What is VSD?VSD seeks to design technology that accounts

for human values in a principled and comprehensive manner throughout the design process (Friedman, 1997).

Key features of VSD Interactional theory Direct and indirect stakeholders Tripartite methodology

Value-Sensitive Design (VSD)

Tripartite methodology

Technical design & mechanisms VS. Values

Value oriented perceptions and experience

Philosophically informed analyses

10/13/2009

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Criteria of Informed Consent Online

“Informed” Disclosure Comprehension

“Consent” Voluntariness Competence Agreement

Minimal Distraction

10/13/2009

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Issues of Informed Consent Online Browsers do not disclose the right sort of

information. Preference settings are typically located

in obscure menu hierarchies. The undue burden still falls to the user. Users' 'out-of-the-box' experience of

cookies (the default setting) is no different than it was in 1995: to accept all cookies.

No browser alerts a user.10/13/2009

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Redesign Goals Enhance users’ local understanding of

discrete cookie events as the events occur Enhance users’ global understanding of

the common uses of cookie technology including potential benefits and risks associated with those uses

Enhance users’ ability to manage cookies Achieve design goals 1, 2 and 3 while

minimizing distraction for the user

10/13/2009

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Redesign Strategies Iterative design, rapid prototyping, user

evaluations Enhancements to cookie manager tool Additional cookie information Peripheral awareness and just-in-time

interventions for cookie events

10/13/2009

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Prototype1 - The Gedanken prototype

Pros: Aware of discrete cookie-

event Automatically block a

website Link a discrete cookie

even with ones already identified

Facilitate cookies mgmt Cons:

Lacked of adequate awareness

Was short of intuitive representation for cookie classification

Fail to conceptual link discrete cookies with a global understanding

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Prototype 2 - the Mozilla Cookie-Watcher

Pros: the ability to link visual

cues for discrete cookie events with the existing Cookie-Management toolkit

the opportunity to present persistent data about recently set cookies

the ease with which a focused user could ignore a small visual representation on the screen

Moving smoothly from observation to management

greater flexibility and expandability for representing the cookie classification scheme

Cons: Cookie information tool

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11 Pros:

The Cookie-Information Dialog Box

Color and formatting in cookie information dialog box

Prototype 3 - the Revised Mozilla Cookie-Watcher

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Usability Study Participants

8 (3 male, 5 female) between the ages of 20~30

University students who are experienced web users

Methods Pre-session semi-structured interview 30 minutes hands-on session + semi-

structured interview Post-session interview

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Usability Study - Results 63% (5 participants) explored the tool on their own 37% (3) chose to close the tool to save screen space

25% (2) showed that they were short of knowledge about cookies in the pre-session interview.

88% stated they would use the tool

Increased awareness of cookie events More likely to understand benefits and risks of cookies More easily make cookie management actions More smoothly transfer from observation to

management

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Discussion What the difficulties to implement just-

in-time interventions for cookie events? Any good ideas?

How to making proper decisions about the tradeoff of privacy and functionality?

Who is better equipped to make the decision? The user or the browser?

10/13/2009

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Questions? Presentation content comes from papers

Informed Consent in the Mozilla Browser: Implementing Value-Sensitive Design

Value Sensitive Design as a Pattern Informed Consent by Design (Chapter 24)

10/13/2009