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Respecting Context to Study Privacy: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
发布时间:2019-05-28    

讲座时间:2019年6月6日(周四)15:00

讲座地点:卫津路校区25教学楼A区3A教室

主讲人: Heng Xu

主讲人简介:

Dr. Heng Xu is a Professor of IT & Analytics at the American University’s Kogod School of Business, where she also serves as the Director for the Kogod CybersecurityGovernance Center. Before joining Kogod, she had a mix of academic and government background, being a professor at Penn State for 12 years, as well as a program director at the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) for 3 years. Dr. Xu's current research focusis on information privacy, data ethics, and data analytics. Her work has received many awards, including the NSF CAREER award in 2010, the Operational Research Society’s Stafford Beer Medal in 2018, and a total of 10 best paper awards and nominations at variousleading research conferences. Currently she is an associate editor at Management Information Systems Quarterly.

讲座内容:

As our information ecology evolves to be more digital and ubiquitous, we are moving from a world where data collectionand processing is siloed and specialized, to a world where everyday individuals produce massive trails of data and consume considerable amounts of data products. When this complex ecosystem is forming around individuals, organizations, and data, it is importantto understand how the human-technology frontier is shaping up in data practices to balance between technological design and the human/societal needs. A major aspect of this human-technology frontier is the concerns on information privacy, which is becomingan increasingly critical and global challenge for many stakeholders including business leaders, IT professionals, privacy activists, and government regulators. In this talk, I will first describe how extensive research efforts were spent on refining the highlycontextualized nature of privacy, and revealing factors that affect people's privacy concerns, from cognition to emotion to environment. Then I will argue that, while we can continue down this line to keep adding factors towards an overcomplicated model ofprivacy: the more researchers try to “refine” a construct to precision, the easier it is for them to focus too much on “siloed” factors and lose sight of the “big picture”, eventually departing from what real-world people think the construct means. What Ipropose in my ongoing work is to develop practical models that are not designed to serve as a comprehensive explanation for the construct of privacy, but to capture most concerns by most individuals in most situations, towards the goal of actionable designguidelines for more usable privacy solutions in practice.

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