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Article
Publication date: 20 April 2022

Johanna Johansen, Tore Pedersen, Simone Fischer-Hübner, Christian Johansen, Gerardo Schneider, Arnold Roosendaal, Harald Zwingelberg, Anders Jakob Sivesind and Josef Noll

This paper aims to present arguments about how a complex concept of privacy labeling can be a solution to the current state of privacy.

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to present arguments about how a complex concept of privacy labeling can be a solution to the current state of privacy.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors give a precise definition of Privacy Labeling (PL), painting a panoptic portrait from seven different perspectives: Business, Legal, Regulatory, Usability and Human Factors, Educative, Technological and Multidisciplinary. They describe a common vision, proposing several important “traits of character” of PL as well as identifying “undeveloped potentialities”, i.e. open problems on which the community can focus.

Findings

This position paper identifies the stakeholders of the PL and their needs with regard to privacy, describing how PL should be and look like to address these needs. Main aspects considered are the PL’s educational power to change people’s knowledge of privacy, tools useful for constructing PL and the possible visual appearances of PL. They also identify how the present landscape of privacy certifications could be improved by PL.

Originality/value

The authors adopt a multidisciplinary approach to defining PL as well as give guidelines in the form of goals, characteristics, open problems, starting points and a roadmap for creating the ideal PL.

Details

Information & Computer Security, vol. 30 no. 3
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 2056-4961

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