Privacy preference signals allow users to express preferences over how their personal data is processed. These signals become important in determining privacy outcomes when they reference an enforceable legal basis, as is the case with recent signals such as the Global Privacy Control and the Transparency & Consent Framework. However, the coexistence of multiple privacy preference signals creates ambiguity as users may transmit more than one signal. This paper collects evidence about ambiguity flowing from the aforementioned two signals and the historic Do Not Track signal. We provide the first empirical evidence that ambiguous signals are sent by web users in the wild. We also show that preferences stored in the browser are reliable predictors of privacy preferences expressed in web dialogs. Finally, we provide the first evidence that popular cookie dialogs are blocked by the majority of users who adopted the Do Not Track and Global Privacy Control standards. These empirical results inform forthcoming legal debates about how to interpret privacy preference signals.
翻译:隐私偏好信号使用户能够表达对其个人数据处理方式的偏好。 这些信号在提及可执行的法律依据时,在确定隐私结果时变得非常重要,如全球隐私控制和透明及同意框架等最新信号。 然而,多个隐私偏好信号的共存造成了模糊性,因为用户可以传递不止一个信号。 本文收集了上述两个信号和历史的Do not track信号产生的模糊性证据。 我们提供了第一个经验性证据,证明网络用户在野外发送了模糊性信号。 我们还表明,浏览器储存的偏好是网络对话中表达的隐私偏好的可靠预测器。 最后,我们提供了第一个证据,即流行的饼干对话被大多数采用Do Not track和全球隐私控制标准的用户阻断。 这些经验性结果为即将进行的关于如何解释隐私偏好信号的法律辩论提供了信息。