Rethinking Location Sharing: Exploring the Implications of Social- Driven vs. Purpose-Driven Location Sharing Karen P. Tang Jialiu Lin, Jason Hong, Dan Siewiorek, Norman Sadeh Human-Computer Interaction Institute School of Computer Science Carnegie Mellon University
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Rethinking Location Sharing: Exploring the Implications of Social-Driven vs. Purpose-Driven Location Sharing, at Ubicomp2010
The popularity of micro-blogging has made general-purpose information sharing a pervasive phenomenon. This trend is now impacting location sharing applications (LSAs) such that users are sharing their location data with a much wider and more diverse audience. In this paper, we describe this as social-driven sharing, distinguishing it from past examples of what we refer to as purpose-driven location sharing. We explore the differences between these two types of sharing by conducting a comparative two-week study with nine participants. We found significant differences in terms of users' decisions about what location information to share, their privacy concerns, and how privacy-preserving their disclosures were. Based on these results, we provide design implications for future LSAs.
Authors are Karen Tang, Jialiu Lin, Jason Hong, and Norman Sadeh
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Rethinking Location Sharing: Exploring the Implications of Social-Driven vs. Purpose-Driven Location Sharing
Karen P. TangJialiu Lin, Jason Hong, Dan Siewiorek, Norman Sadeh
Human-Computer Interaction InstituteSchool of Computer ScienceCarnegie Mellon University
Location-Based Services Are Here
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Types of Location-Based Services
tracking personal trends (no sharing)
doing local searches (sharing with a service provider)
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[google latitude] [yelp]
Location Sharing Applications (LSAs)
tracking personal trends (no sharing)
doing local searches (sharing with a service provider)
share locations with other people (a social network)
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activecampus[griswold, ’03]
lemming[hong, ’04]
Past Research Examples of LSAs
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2003 2004 2005 20082007 2009
esm study[consolvo, ’05]
reno[smith, ’05]
whereabouts[brown, ’07]
watchme[marmasse, ’04]
contextcontacts[raento, ’05]
connecto[barkhuus, ’08]
locaccino[sadeh, ’09]
1992
active badge[want, ’92]
activecampus[griswold, ’03]
lemming[hong, ’04]
Past Research Examples of LSAs
6
2003 2004 2005 20082007 2009
esm study[consolvo, ’05]
reno[smith, ’05]
whereabouts[brown, ’07]
watchme[marmasse, ’04]
contextcontacts[raento, ’05]
connecto[barkhuus, ’08]
locaccino[sadeh, ’09]
1992
active badge[want, ’92]
The most common use of the system was by the receptionist who routinely used it when forwarding telephone calls from the main switchboard.
Groups of people who regularly wanted to hold meetings could find each other easily with very little notice.
“
activecampus[griswold, ’03]
lemming[hong, ’04]
Past Research Examples of LSAs
7
2003 2004 2005 20082007 2009
esm study[consolvo, ’05]
reno[smith, ’05]
whereabouts[brown, ’07]
watchme[marmasse, ’04]
contextcontacts[raento, ’05]
connecto[barkhuus, ’08]
locaccino[sadeh, ’09]
1992
active badge[want, ’92]
Given mobile users’ fragmented attention, the time it takes to make a phone call must remain extremely short…These [context] cues [which include location] should facilitate decisions about whether to call, and if so, which communication channel to use.
“
activecampus[griswold, ’03]
lemming[hong, ’04]
Past Research Examples of LSAs
8
2003 2004 2005 20082007 2009
esm study[consolvo, ’05]
reno[smith, ’05]
whereabouts[brown, ’07]
watchme[marmasse, ’04]
contextcontacts[raento, ’05]
connecto[barkhuus, ’08]
locaccino[sadeh, ’09]
1992
active badge[want, ’92]
Phoebe wonders what she and her husband, Ross, will do for the evening, so she sends a location query to Ross. While he is waiting at the bus stop near his office, Ross sends a location update to Phoebe. Phoebe receives the message at home, eagerly anticipating Ross’ arrival home. When Ross gets off the bus, a location update is sent to Phoebe and she knows that he’s only 10 minutes away. She sets out dinner just in time for her husband’s arrival.
“
Common Themes for Past LSAs
driven by functional purposes:• coordination• collaboration• interruptibility• event planning
one-to-one sharing or small group sharing
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Industry Trends for Information Sharing
integrated with online social networks (OSNs)• diverse networks, lots of weak links [wellman, ‘01]
• very large networks [donah, ‘04]
sharing is often not because one needs to share, but because one wants to share
driven by a social reason for sharing
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Commercial Examples of LSAsmostly aimed at social-driven sharing
2005 2006 2009 20102007 2008
Commercial Examples of LSAsmostly aimed at social-driven sharing
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2005 2006 2009 20102007 2008
“I'm just down the street!” Never miss another chance to connect when you happen to be at the same place at the same time. [facebook places]
Find out who’s around, what to do, and where to go. Introducing…the new Loopt so you can always stay connected… [loopt]
Share your location and stay connected with your friends. [plazes]“““
Result: Leaky Privacy Decisionspurpose-driven: easily locatablesocial-driven: susceptible to being located
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resource(s) purpose-driven social-driven
map 50.0% 10.2%
map + web 62.3% 19.4%
map + web + routines 90.8% 51.0%
Summary & Conclusionsreframing: purpose- vs. social-driven sharingsignificant differences for social sharing:
• what: different types of disclosures [semantic]
• how: different intentions for blurring [to hide]
• how: considered social issues [impressions]
• actual privacy: still susceptible to attacks
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Summary & Conclusionsreframing: purpose- vs. social-driven sharingsignificant differences for social sharing:
• what: different types of disclosures [semantic]
• how: different intentions for blurring [to hide]
• how: considered social issues [impressions]
• actual privacy: still susceptible to attacks
context for sharing is an important factor
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Limitations & Future Workhypothetical disclosure scenariossmall, homogenous participant pool
• predominantly college students• already familiar social network users
comparing two extremes of location sharing• many other types of possible location sharing• one-to-one vs. one-to-many purpose-driven• one-to-many vs. one-to-one social-driven
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Questions?Karen P. TangHuman-Computer Interaction InstituteSchool of Computer ScienceCarnegie Mellon University
This research has been supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grants CNS-0627513, IIS-0534406, and ITR-032535, by the CyLab at Carnegie Mellon University under grants DAAD19-02-1-0389 from the Army Research Office, by Nokia, by Portugal ICTI, and by a Microsoft Computational Thinking grant.