Our research aims to highlight and alleviate the complex tensions around online safety, privacy, and smartphone usage in families so that parents and teens can work together to better manage mobile privacy and security-related risks. We developed a mobile application ("app") for Community Oversight of Privacy and Security ("CO-oPS") and had parents and teens assess whether it would be applicable for use with their families. CO-oPS is an Android app that allows a group of users to co-monitor the apps installed on one another's devices and the privacy permissions granted to those apps. We conducted a study with 19 parent-teen (ages 13-17) pairs to understand how they currently managed mobile safety and app privacy within their family and then had them install, use, and evaluate the CO-oPS app. We found that both parents and teens gave little consideration to online safety and privacy before installing new apps or granting privacy permissions. When using CO-oPS, participants liked how the app increased transparency into one another's devices in a way that facilitated communication, but were less inclined to use features for in-app messaging or to hide apps from one another. Key themes related to power imbalances between parents and teens surfaced that made co-management challenging. Parents were more open to collaborative oversight than teens, who felt that it was not their place to monitor their parents, even though both often believed parents lacked the technological expertise to monitor themselves. Our study sheds light on why collaborative practices for managing online safety and privacy within families may be beneficial but also quite difficult to implement in practice. We provide recommendations for overcoming these challenges based on the insights gained from our study.
翻译:我们的研究旨在突出和缓解家庭在线安全、隐私和智能手机使用方面的复杂紧张关系,以便父母和青少年能够共同合作,更好地管理移动隐私和安全相关风险。我们开发了一个移动应用程序(“应用程序 ” ) 用于社区隐私和安全监督(“CO-oPS ” ), 并让父母和青少年评估该应用程序是否适用于他们的家人。 CO-PS是一个Android 应用程序,让用户群体共同监测安装在彼此设备上的应用程序和这些应用程序的隐私许可。 我们与19对父母和青少年进行了一项研究,以更好地管理移动隐私和安全相关风险。 我们与19对夫妇(13-17岁)合作,以了解他们目前如何管理移动安全及在家庭内部应用隐私的“应用程序 应用程序 ” ( “ 应用程序 应用程序 应用程序”) ), 并让父母和青少年共同评估该应用程序是否适用于他们的家人。 我们发现,在安装新的应用程序或授予隐私许可之前,父母对网络安全和隐私问题没有给予更多的考虑。 当使用该软件时,参与者认为该应用程序如何在另一个设备上增加透明度,但对于管理内部的监管却不太倾向于使用简化。