Computers, Privacy & the Constitution

Complementing Notice with Periodical Disclosures

Introduction

Privacy policies or terms of use agreements (“notices”) are too long, time consuming, and complicated for most people, and therefore do not result in truly informed consent of those that click “agree”. To make things worse, notices often require you to consent at an early stage for different collections and uses of data that would span over a long period of time, and are very hard to process in advance. This essay suggests a framework, drawn from the field of behavioral economic analysis of consumer protection, that I found helpful in thinking about these problems, and most importantly, providing ideas for a solution. It should be noted that I am familiar with class-mate’s interesting essay on notices, but I address this issue from a very different angle.

The Framework

Bar-Gill and Ferrari discuss the issue of “consumer’s mistakes,” where imperfect information and imperfect rationality lead consumers to misperception about products they use. In certain cases, this results in harm to these consumers, and the writers argue that the more harmful mistakes are those concerning the individual consumer’s product use-pattern, as opposed to mistakes about the product’s attributes or about average use-patterns (because the latter are easier to identify and correct quickly). As a solution, they suggest that when the seller has a long-term relationship and is therefore, voluntarily collecting individual use information, regulation should mandate certain disclosures by sellers of consumer’s product use-pattern. For instance, credit card consumers tend to “optimism” and often fail to take into consideration the probability that they personally will end up paying over-limit and late fees. Mandating credit card issuers to disclose individual fee-paying patterns, could be helpful in gradually amending individual consumers’ misperceptions.

This framework, I argue, could be applicable to notices. In some sense, consumers’ automatic consents to notices, and continued “pay-with-data” exchanges, reflect a “consumer’s mistake”, which stems from consumers’ information asymmetries and imperfect rationality (optimism, neglect of small probabilities, and myopic behavior). To be clear, I do not argue that mistakes regarding over-paying a few dollars a month are of the same harm and magnitude as the loss of privacy; just, that from a pragmatic standpoint, such framing could be insightful and productive. Like credit card consumers, consenting visitors in different online “pay-with-data” exchanges fail to grasp the long-term consequences of their consent to the initial “contract”. Different mechanisms set to improve the effectiveness of notices could definitely raise people’s awareness, but might be inherently limited because of their timing, usually at the beginning of the relationship. At that stage, even if the notice is very apprehensible, all one can truly learn about is the “product’s attributes” – what data does a certain website collect, for what purposes, etc… Because of consumers’ imperfect information, and propensity toward optimism (“this wouldn’t happen to me”), such “general” notices fail to pass through.

Thinking About Solutions

Bar-Gill and Ferrari argue in favor of mandating on-going individual use-pattern disclosures when the seller has a long-term relationship and is voluntarily collecting individual use information. Obviously, websites that present notice (for collection and use of data) fit this description perfectly.

Alongside “improved” notices, there could also be a great benefit in an ongoing individualized use-pattern disclosure mechanism that will provide people with a chance to gradually “correct their privacy mistakes.” Ideally, a certain website’s disclosure should provide each user with a periodic review of the data that it acquired from him specifically, and a general explanation about how has this data been used. Such personalized disclosure could demonstrate to people what information have they been giving up, and enable a more informed reassessment of personal risks.

In the age of Big Data, and given most people’s limited technical capabilities, one could worry that such disclosures would still be too complicated for consumers, but in my opinion, this depends on design. Throwing masses of data at consumers would probably be ineffective, but an automatic “summary” or “highlights” could be very helpful. For example, a user might benefit from a brief periodical report explaining that the application possesses data about his whereabouts on X amount of days over the last year/month/week. An even more effective disclosure would highlight certain personal details that were collected about you, and provide some explanation on their use. A more personalized disclosure is more likely to get to people, demonstrating what personal information is exposed and making people think twice on whether this is worth it.

The big question is how could such disclosures become reality? Regulatory mandated disclosures could, in my opinion, be an effective solution also regarding “use of data.” However, it is important to note that personal data privacy protection is less regulated than general consumer protection, and therefore, to apply this idea here is somewhat more “ambitious”. Also, mandatory on-going disclosures, even if designed thoughtfully by the regulator, might not be as effective as hoped. Companies are likely to make disclosures as “dry” as possible, and it would be difficult to require them to effectively highlight the individual risks. With that regard, technical solutions, putting the “disclosure” in the hands of an independent third party, more adequately incentivized, might have some advantages over regulatory mandated solutions. Perhaps like tosdr.org provides accessibility at the notice stage, others could assist on an ongoing basis, providing automatic periodical reports that identify the information you provide to a certain website, and more importantly, reflect the risks involved in a comprehensible manner. For instance, such software could provide automated simple explanations about “worst-case scenarios” it deduces: “news website Y holds a list of all articles you read this year, including this one about ‘how to hide that you cheated on your wife.’ This information has probably been sold to Z and W and could end up…”). Although there are technical measures that allow users to understand, in some circumstances, what data did they provide, in my research I did not find software that allows on-going potential-risk-oriented “disclosures” which deal exactly with the informational limitations that are so prevalent among users.

This is responsive to one aspect of my comments last time around. This draft presents the problem that the obscurity of the last draft obscured. Now, given an "application" of one article, we can perceive clearly what nonsense the whole proposition was from the beginning. This is progress

So—on the basis of some nonsense some people said once, which we don't actually analyze but just sort of assume must be correct and meaningful because they said it—we can imagine a regulatory intervention that would require data-miners to show the ore what was made from it. Never mind, as the draft itself notes, that no factual similarity exists between the credit card transaction log and the Facebook weblog. Never mind that in one case the intervention requires the consumer to be notified about his own spending, and in the other case the requirement would be for disclosure and analysis of third-party activity. Never mind the differences between the regulation of banking and the regulation of speech. Never mind, in fact, anything that would distinguish between the nonsense we are supposed to assume wasn't nonsense in its original context solely—so far as the draft gives us reason to believe it at all—because it was published once, and its importance as an "application" in this context.

It is almost as though the goal were to avoid thinking. Two other fellows thought about something once, and if I simply mechanically "apply" their thinking to the current completely different situation at least I won't have to do any thinking of my own.

Let's go from drafts that tell me some theory is in general useful, and drafts that tell me that someone else used them once, to a thought of your own which isn't recommended by its generation in any particular school of dogma, or by being lifted from something that someone else thought. State your idea simply at the beginning of the draft. Show how that idea develops from the facts you have learned about the world. Answer some of the obvious questions or objections. Leave the reader with an implication she can explore on her own given what you have thought so far for her.

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r9 - 12 May 2015 - 21:07:02 - EbenMoglen
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