posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00authored byPatrick Gage Kelley, Joanna Bresee, Lorrie CranorLorrie Cranor, Robert W. Reeder
We used an iterative design process to develop a privacy label that
presents to consumers the ways organizations collect, use, and
share personal information. Many surveys have shown that
consumers are concerned about online privacy, yet current
mechanisms to present website privacy policies have not been
successful. This research addresses the present gap in the
communication and understanding of privacy policies, by creating
an information design that improves the visual presentation and
comprehensibility of privacy policies. Drawing from nutrition,
warning, and energy labeling, as well as from the effort towards
creating a standardized banking privacy notification, we present
our process for constructing and refining a label tuned to privacy.
This paper describes our design methodology; findings from two
focus groups; and accuracy, timing, and likeability results from a
laboratory study with 24 participants. Our study results
demonstrate that compared to existing natural language privacy
policies, the proposed privacy label allows participants to find
information more quickly and accurately, and provides a more
enjoyable information seeking experience.