Assessing intrusiveness of smartphone apps
[摘要] We tackle the challenge of improving transparency for smartphone apps by focusing on the intrusiveness component of assessing privacy risk. Specifically, we develop a framework for qualitatively assessing and quantitatively measuring the intrusiveness of apps based on their data access behavior. This framework has two essential components: 1) the Privacy Fingerprint, a concise yet holistic visual that captures the data access patterns unique to each app, including which types and under which privacy-relevant usage contexts sensitive data are collected, and 2) an Intrusiveness Score that numerically measures each app;;s level of intrusiveness, based on real data accesses gathered from empirical testing on about 40 popular Android apps across 4 app categories. Used together, the Privacy Fingerprint and Intrusiveness Score help smartphone users easily and accurately assess the relative intrusiveness of apps during the decision-making process of installing apps. Our study demonstrates that the Intrusiveness Score is especially useful in helping to compare apps that exhibit similar types of data accesses. Another major contribution of the thesis is the identification and quantification of the proportion of accesses that are made while the user is idle. As our preliminary user study will show, this level of idle access activity significantly enhances the profiling potential of apps, increasing the app;;s intrusiveness. When quantified, idle access activity exerts significant impact on changes in an app;;s Intrusiveness Score and its relative intrusiveness ranking within a given app category.
[发布日期] [发布机构] Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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