Title: Designing for privacy in ubiquitous social networking

Authors: Antonio Sapuppo; João Figueiras

Addresses: Center for Communication, Media and Information Technologies, Aalborg University, Sydhavnsgade 17-19, Frederikskaj 12, Copenhagen 2450, Denmark ' Telecommunications Research Center Vienna (FTW), Donau-City-Straße 1, A-1220 Vienna, Austria

Abstract: Improving human communication during face-to-face meetings is nowadays possible by transferring online social networking benefits to the physical world. This is enabled by the ubiquitous social networking services that became available by means of wirelessly interconnected smart devices, automatically exchanging personal user data. The main goal of these services is to facilitate the initialisation of relationships between people who do not know each other, but they probably should. Given that sharing of personal information is an intrinsic part of ubiquitous social networking, these services are subject to crucial privacy threats. Inspired by the usability and privacy limitations of existing design solutions, we identify, describe and qualitatively evaluate four drawbacks to be avoided when designing ubiquitous social networking applications. By addressing these drawbacks, services become more functional and more oriented to ensure the end users' privacy, thus contributing to the long-term success of this technology.

Keywords: end user privacy; ubiquitous computing; information disclosure; social networking; design guidelines; personal information; information sharing; privacy protection.

DOI: 10.1504/IJAHUC.2015.067758

International Journal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing, 2015 Vol.18 No.1/2, pp.102 - 119

Received: 04 Mar 2013
Accepted: 06 Sep 2013

Published online: 05 Mar 2015 *

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