Limits of Individual Consent and Models of Distributed Consent in Online Social Networks
Personal data are not discrete in socially-networked digital environments. A user who consents to allow access to their profile can expose the personal data of their network connections to non-consented access. Therefore, the traditional consent model (informed and individual) is not appropriate in...
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Zusammenfassung: | Personal data are not discrete in socially-networked digital environments. A
user who consents to allow access to their profile can expose the personal data
of their network connections to non-consented access. Therefore, the
traditional consent model (informed and individual) is not appropriate in
social networks where informed consent may not be possible for all users
affected by data processing and where information is distributed across users.
Here, we outline the adequacy of consent for data transactions. Informed by the
shortcomings of individual consent, we introduce both a platform-specific model
of "distributed consent" and a cross-platform model of a "consent passport." In
both models, individuals and groups can coordinate by giving consent
conditional on that of their network connections. We simulate the impact of
these distributed consent models on the observability of social networks and
find that low adoption would allow macroscopic subsets of networks to preserve
their connectivity and privacy. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2006.16140 |