CRNov 20, 2021

Car drivers' privacy concerns and trust perceptions

arXiv:2111.15467v16 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy and trust issues for car drivers regarding data collection, though it is incremental as it primarily reports survey findings without proposing new technical solutions.

This paper investigated car drivers' understanding of privacy implications from data collection by modern vehicles, finding that privacy concerns and trust in cybersecurity were both modest (with cybersecurity trust lower than safety trust), contradicting the hypothesis that these factors oppose each other.

Modern cars are evolving in many ways. Technologies such as infotainment systems and companion mobile applications collect a variety of personal data from drivers to enhance the user experience. This paper investigates the extent to which car drivers understand the implications for their privacy, including that car manufacturers must treat that data in compliance with the relevant regulations. It does so by distilling out drivers' concerns on privacy and relating them to their perceptions of trust on car cyber-security. A questionnaire is designed for such purposes to collect answers from a set of 1101 participants, so that the results are statistically relevant. In short, privacy concerns are modest, perhaps because there still is insufficient general awareness on the personal data that are involved, both for in-vehicle treatment and for transmission over the Internet. Trust perceptions on cyber-security are modest too (lower than those on car safety), a surprising contradiction to our research hypothesis that privacy concerns and trust perceptions on car cyber-security are opponent. We interpret this as a clear demand for information and awareness-building campaigns for car drivers, as well as for technical cyber-security and privacy measures that are truly considerate of the human factor.

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