| Abstract: | With the advent of social services on
the Internet that encourage the disclosure of more
and more personal information, it has become
increasingly difficult to find out where and for
which purpose personal data is collected and stored.
The potential for misuse of such data will increase
as well, e.g., due to the ongoing extension of social
sites with new features that make it more appealing
to reveal personal details. In order to research and
develop approaches that give way to privacy on the
Internet, it is important to know which kind of
information can be found, who has been responsible
for publishing it, the age of the information etc.
This paper describes a user study about the personal
information available about Digital Natives, i.e.,
young people who have grown up with the Internet. In
particular, we have guided 65 undergraduate students
to search the web for personal information on
themselves by using various search engines. Our
students have completed 302 questionnaire sheets
altogether. We have analyzed the questionnaires by
means of statistical significance tests, cluster
analysis and association-rule mining. As a part of
our results, we have found out that today's personal
search engines like 123people.com do not find much
more information than general-purpose search engines
like google, and that today's Digital Natives are
surprisingly aware of the information they are
willing to disclose. |
|---|---|
| Material: | Questionnaire (in German): privacyworkshop-guide.pdf Guide (in German): privacyworkshop-questionnaire.pdf |
| Contact: | Erik
Buchmann |

