CRAIApr 24

PrivSTRUCT: Untangling Data Purpose Compliance of Privacy Policies in Google Play Store

arXiv:2604.2215751.7h-index: 34
AI Analysis

For regulators and users, it exposes systematic transparency gaps in privacy policy compliance on Google Play.

PrivSTRUCT extracts data-purpose links from privacy policies using structural cues, achieving over 2x more excerpts than PoliGrapher. Applied to 3,756 apps, it reveals developers overstate purposes by 20.4% (first-party) and 9.7% (third-party) when using global vs. local disclosures.

Existing research typically treats privacy policies as flat, uniform text, extracting information without regard for the document's logical hierarchy. Disregard for structural cues of section headings designed to guide the reader, often leads automated methods to entangle distinct data practices, particularly when linking sensitive data items to their specific purposes. To address this, we introduce PrivSTRUCT, a novel and systematic encoder and decoder combined framework that to untangle complex privacy disclosures. Benchmarking against the state-of-the-art tool PoliGrapher reveals that PrivSTRUCT robustly extracts more than x2 the number of data item and purpose excerpts while retaining developer-defined structural cues. By applying PrivSTRUCT to a large-scale dataset of 3,756 Android apps, we uncover a critical transparency gap: the probability of developers overstating a data purpose is 20.4% higher for first-party collection and 9.7% higher for third-party sharing when they rely on globally defined purposes rather than specific, locally scoped disclosures. Alarmingly, we find that sensitive third-party data flows such as sharing financial data for analytics are frequently diluted and entangled into generic or unrelated categories, highlighting a persistent failure in the current purpose disclosure landscape.

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