PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Finding hidden circles may improve social network privacy settings

2013-11-27
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Matthew Swayne
mls29@psu.edu
814-865-9481
Penn State
Finding hidden circles may improve social network privacy settings Creating a computer program to find relationships in networks, such as Google Plus and Facebook, may help users more easily set up and maintain privacy settings, according to researchers.

"We want to help users configure privacy to be better protected," said Anna Squicciarini, assistant professor of information sciences and technology, Penn State. "However not all users are interested or motivated to change their privacy settings,"

The researchers designed a software program to better predict how users might assign privacy levels to new content to different groups of people in their networks.

Users may create and maintain connections -- circles -- that are based on more specific and temporary relationships, such as ones based on hobbies and interests, that are not included in the privacy settings provided by the social networks. Many users also skip the process of manually setting privacy restrictions as they add new content and new members to their networks because it can be time consuming or confusing.

"If users could have privacy settings automatically set when they, for instance, add new members to their circle, or when they add new content, we feel it would improve security, but not affect their experience," said Squicciarini, who worked with Sushama Karumanchi, doctoral candidate in information sciences and technology, Penn State; Dan Lin, assistant professor of computer science, Missouri University of Science and Technology; and Nicole DeSisto, systems development and operations consultant.

The program, which used data-mining techniques to find groups and connections, had an average 23 percent error rate in attempting to predict how people would respond to 75,000 different privacy settings in 15 different scenarios -- for instance, how a person might choose privacy setting when posting a picture of a recent vacation.

"Our approach performs extremely well for some scenarios, reaching an error rate of 3 percent, whereas it seems to be not effective for scenarios involving re-uploading content found from others," noted the researchers, who reported their findings in a recent issue of Computers and Security. The accuracy rate improved by up to 90 percent in certain categories during later trials by making the choices about actions and membership more specific.

"Interestingly, when inferring policies targeting general friends, people with common interest and people with similar background, accuracy is up to 90 percent," the researchers said. "For policies targeting family, colleagues, close friends, the policy prediction accuracy is lower, about 78 percent."

The researchers asked 140 participants -- 62 percent female and 38 percent male -- questions about their interests, as well as their social networking habits and attitudes about privacy settings. The subjects also reported how they would set their privacy setting on their social networks under various scenarios, including how they would share family photos, business photos, news stories and posts about hobbies.

Currently, people using social networks can manage privacy levels so that their content is only shared with select users, said Squicciarini. For example, Facebook offers customized groups for its members, while Google Plus allows its members to designated their connections as friends, family, acquaintances or following.

However, these settings do not easily allow people to create more specific interests groups within those main categories, nor can the privacy settings be automatically assigned as new contacts join a user's social network.

"There's only so much that we can learn based on surveys like this and it would be better to actually observe how users manage their privacy settings in a realistic social networking environment," said Squicciarini.

INFORMATION:

The National Science Foundation supported this work.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Inexpensive 'nano-camera' can operate at the speed of light

2013-11-27
Inexpensive 'nano-camera' can operate at the speed of light Device could be used in medical imaging, collision-avoidance detectors for cars, and interactive gaming CAMBRIDGE, Mass -- A $500 "nano-camera" that can operate at the speed of light has been developed ...

Drug reduces brain changes, motor deficits associated with Huntington's disease

2013-11-27
Drug reduces brain changes, motor deficits associated with Huntington's disease Animal study supports disease therapies that mimic the action of growth-promoting proteins in brain WASHINGTON, DC — A drug that acts like a growth-promoting protein in the brain ...

Scientists discover how leukemia cells exploit 'enhancer' DNA elements to cause lethal disease

2013-11-27
Scientists discover how leukemia cells exploit 'enhancer' DNA elements to cause lethal disease Discovery also reveals how a drug, now in multiple human trials, halts production of Myc protein and stops progression of AML Cold Spring Harbor, NY – A team of ...

Kessler stroke researchers explore five new avenues for rehabilitation research

2013-11-27
Kessler stroke researchers explore five new avenues for rehabilitation research Treatments based on behavioral or non-invasive physiological stimulation show greatest potential West Orange, NJ. November 26, 2013. Because the concept of permanent neurological ...

Health insurance increases preventive care but not risky behaviors

2013-11-27
Health insurance increases preventive care but not risky behaviors (SACRAMENTO, Calif.) -- People with health insurance are more likely to use preventive services such as flu shots and health screenings to reduce their risk of serious ...

National study finds donor age not a factor in most corneal transplants

2013-11-27
National study finds donor age not a factor in most corneal transplants (SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — Ten years after a transplant, a cornea from a 71-year-old donor is likely to remain as healthy as a cornea from a donor half that age, and ...

A celebration of a Persian mystic leads to better understanding of dynamics

2013-11-27
A celebration of a Persian mystic leads to better understanding of dynamics James Hanna likes to have fun with his engineering views of physics. So when he and his colleague Jemal Guven visited their friend Martin Michael Müller in France on a rainy, dreary day, the three ...

Shortage of rheumatologists -- In some US regions closest doctor may be 200 miles away

2013-11-27
Shortage of rheumatologists -- In some US regions closest doctor may be 200 miles away A novel study published in the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) journal, Arthritis & Rheumatism, shows that smaller micropolitan areas of the U.S.—those with less than 50,000 people—have ...

Negative BRCA testing may not always imply lowered breast cancer risk

2013-11-27
Negative BRCA testing may not always imply lowered breast cancer risk PHILADELPHIA — Women who are members of families with BRCA2 mutations but who test negative for the family-specific BRCA2 mutations are still at greater risk for developing ...

2-way traffic enables proteins to get where needed, avoid disease

2013-11-26
2-way traffic enables proteins to get where needed, avoid disease Augusta, Ga. - It turns out that your messenger RNA may catch more than one ride to get where it's going. Scientists have found that mRNA may travel one way down a cell, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Is writing with AI at work undermining your credibility?

Parasitic worms evolved to suppress neurons in skin

Stalking, obtaining restraining order linked with increased cardiovascular disease risk in women

Women who have been stalked may have a higher risk of heart disease, stroke

Milestone for medical research: New method enables comprehensive identification of omega fatty acids

Strategically bringing back beavers could support healthy and climate-resilient watersheds

The cerebral cortex ages less than thought

Neurodegenerative diseases: What if the key lies in the mitochondria?

Researchers discover tantalisingly ‘sneaky’ way to help diners make healthier, greener menu choices

Conditional cash transfers significantly reduce AIDS incidence and mortality among brazil’s most vulnerable women

Oh, rats! How the "learning machine" of the brain speaks in different codes

Oxford study outlines new blueprint to help tackle the biodiversity impacts of farming

Coastline of lakes an important part of global carbon cycle

Researchers identify a potential biomarker for long COVID

New tool aims to improve lung cancer prevention, screening, and treatment

Cultivating compassion in children can lead to healthier eating habits

New study of East Palestine, Ohio, train disaster finds high rates of PTSD and depression in affected communities

Study: Routine childhood and adolescent immunizations declining in Michigan

Pharmacotherapy for the management of obesity — an updated guideline

Five things to know about cannabis and psychosis

Ancient practice of blowing through a conch shell could help to treat dangerous snoring condition

Research highlights depression risk in high-performance athletes, despite benefits of physical activity

Scientists uncover new way in which cells tolerate anticancer drugs

Athlete mental health support from coaches “under explored” in research amidst deselection concerns

UCLA study reveals complex muscle control behind blinking and eyelid function

Destructive cosmic airbursts likely more common than previously believed

Does a parent’s exposure to workplace chemicals affect autism in their children?

Yale study: Mobile phone app reduced suicidal behavior among high-risk patients

‘A tipping point’: An update from the frontiers of Alzheimer’s disease research 

Copper antimicrobials can drive antibiotic resistance in bacteria, but there’s a fix, scientists say

[Press-News.org] Finding hidden circles may improve social network privacy settings