DocumentCode :
1806859
Title :
Privacy and contextual integrity: framework and applications
Author :
Barth, Adam ; Datta, Anupam ; Mitchell, John C. ; Nissenbaum, Helen
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Stanford Univ., CA
fYear :
2006
fDate :
21-24 May 2006
Lastpage :
198
Abstract :
Contextual integrity is a conceptual framework for understanding privacy expectations and their implications developed in the literature on law, public policy, and political philosophy. We formalize some aspects of contextual integrity in a logical framework for expressing and reasoning about norms of transmission of personal information. In comparison with access control and privacy policy frameworks such as RBAC, EPAL, and P3P, these norms focus on who personal information is about, how it is transmitted, and past and future actions by both the subject and the users of the information. Norms can be positive or negative depending on whether they refer to actions that are allowed or disallowed. Our model is expressive enough to capture naturally many notions of privacy found in legislation, including those found in HIPAA, COPPA, and GLBA. A number of important problems regarding compliance with privacy norms, future requirements associated with specific actions, and relations between policies and legal standards reduce to standard decision procedures for temporal logic
Keywords :
data integrity; data privacy; temporal logic; COPPA; GLBA; HIPAA; contextual integrity; legislation; personal information; privacy expectations; privacy norms; privacy policy; temporal logic; Access control; Context; Internet; Law; Legal factors; Legislation; Logic; Privacy; Protection; Public policy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Security and Privacy, 2006 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Berkeley/Oakland, CA
ISSN :
1081-6011
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2574-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SP.2006.32
Filename :
1624011
Link To Document :
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