Resumen
The article presents information on a set of guidelines for designing privacy interfaces for information management. Designers of information management software must strike a delicate balance between protecting user privacy and facilitating the sharing of information. Since there is no universal policy appropriate for all users, designers must provide users with a means of specifying their own individual privacy policies. Each user then determines what information to conceal, what to reveal, and to whom. While information protection mechanisms abound, the user interface to such mechanisms has received scant attention. The article, proposed a set of guidelines for designing privacy interfaces that facilitate the creation, inspection, modification, and monitoring of privacy policies. These guidelines are based on COLLABCLIO-a system that supports automated sharing of Web browsing histories. COLLAB-CLIO stores a person's browsing history and makes it searchable by content, keyword, and other attributes. Some of them are, privacy interfaces should facilitate the creation, inspection, modification, and monitoring of privacy policies, privacy policies should apply automatically to objects as they are encountered, and others. |