CYCRFLSEDec 18, 2020

TILT: A GDPR-Aligned Transparency Information Language and Toolkit for Practical Privacy Engineering

arXiv:2012.10431v140 citations
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This work addresses the problem of effectively representing and processing transparency information for privacy engineers and data subjects, aiming to improve GDPR compliance and user sovereignty in modern web information systems.

This paper introduces TILT, a transparency information language and toolkit designed to represent and process transparency information in alignment with GDPR requirements. It enables automated and adaptive use of transparency information, facilitating inter-organizational analysis of data practices and presenting information to users through novel, comprehensible interfaces.

In this paper, we present TILT, a transparency information language and toolkit explicitly designed to represent and process transparency information in line with the requirements of the GDPR and allowing for a more automated and adaptive use of such information than established, legalese data protection policies do. We provide a detailed analysis of transparency obligations from the GDPR to identify the expressiveness required for a formal transparency language intended to meet respective legal requirements. In addition, we identify a set of further, non-functional requirements that need to be met to foster practical adoption in real-world (web) information systems engineering. On this basis, we specify our formal language and present a respective, fully implemented toolkit around it. We then evaluate the practical applicability of our language and toolkit and demonstrate the additional prospects it unlocks through two different use cases: a) the inter-organizational analysis of personal data-related practices allowing, for instance, to uncover data sharing networks based on explicitly announced transparency information and b) the presentation of formally represented transparency information to users through novel, more comprehensible, and potentially adaptive user interfaces, heightening data subjects' actual informedness about data-related practices and, thus, their sovereignty. Altogether, our transparency information language and toolkit allow - differently from previous work - to express transparency information in line with actual legal requirements and practices of modern (web) information systems engineering and thereby pave the way for a multitude of novel possibilities to heighten transparency and user sovereignty in practice.

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