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Effectiveness and users' experience of obfuscation as a privacy-enhancing technology for sharing photos

  • Yifang Li
  • , Nishant Vishwamitra
  • , Bart P. Knijnenburg
  • , Hongxin Hu
  • , Kelly Caine
  • Clemson University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

88 Scopus citations

Abstract

Current collaborative photo privacy protection solutions can be categorized into two approaches: controlling the recipient, which restricts certain viewers' access to the photo, and controlling the content, which protects all or part of the photo from being viewed. Focusing on the latter approach, we introduce privacy-enhancing obfuscations for photos and conduct an online experiment with 271 participants to evaluate their effectiveness against human recognition and how they affect the viewing experience. Results indicate the two most common obfuscations, blurring and pixelating, are ineffective. On the other hand, inpainting, which removes an object or person entirely, and avatar, which replaces content with a graphical representation are effective. From a viewer experience perspective, blurring, pixelating, inpainting, and avatar are preferable. Based on these results, we suggest inpainting and avatar may be useful as privacy-enhancing technologies for photos, because they are both effective at increasing privacy for elements of a photo and provide a good viewer experience.

Original languageEnglish
Article number67
JournalProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
Volume1
Issue numberCSCW
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2017

Keywords

  • Image obfuscation
  • Image redaction
  • Online social network
  • Privacy
  • Security
  • User experience

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