CYCRJan 20, 2022

How Do Socio-Demographic Patterns Define Digital Privacy Divide?

arXiv:2201.07936v1
AI Analysis

It addresses the gap in digital privacy protection levels for ICT users, but the approach is incremental as it applies existing statistical methods to new survey data.

This paper tackles the digital privacy divide (DPD) problem in ICT systems by analyzing socio-demographic patterns, finding that young users (15-32 years) are generally more concerned about digital privacy than senior ones (33 years and over), with the DPD survey showing high internal consistency reliability (Cronbach's α=0.92).

Digital privacy has become an essential component of information and communications technology (ICT) systems. There are many existing methods for digital privacy protection, including network security, cryptography, and access control. However, there is still a gap in the digital privacy protection levels available for users. This paper studies the digital privacy divide (DPD) problem in ICT systems. First, we introduce an online DPD study for understanding the DPD problem by collecting responses from 776 ICT users using crowdsourcing task assignments. Second, we propose a factor analysis-based statistical method for generating the DPD index from a set of observable DPD question variables. In particular, the DPD index provides one scaled measure for the DPD gap by exploring the dimensionality of the eight questions in the DPD survey. Third, we introduce a DPD proportional odds model for analyzing the relationship between the DPD status and the socio-demographic patterns of the users. Our results show that the DPD survey meets the internal consistency reliability with rigorous statistical measures, e.g., Cronbach's $α=0.92$. Furthermore, the DPD index is shown to capture the underlying communality of all DPD variables. Finally, the DPD proportional odds model indicates a strong statistical correlation between the DPD status and the age groups of the ICT users. For example, we find that young users (15-32 years) are generally more concerned about their digital privacy than senior ones (33 years and over).

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