Content Analysis of Privacy Policies for Health Social Networks
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Author
Pratik Savla
Tech report number
CERIAS TR 2011-04
Entry type
mastersthesis
Abstract
The Web is an important resource for health information. Pew's Internet and American Life Project found 62% of adult Web users looking for health-related information on health social networks. However, the National Survey on Identity and Privacy in Social Media by The Ponemon Institute reported that about 56% of adult users were anxious about the privacy of their personal information on social networks. This study examines the privacy policies of 35 online social network sites selected based on the U.S. users’
traffic. The objectives of this research are to determine the extent to which privacy policies of online health social networks comply with the principles of Fair Information
Practice (FIP) and to evaluate the readability and accessibility of policies. To measure the readability of the policy statements, the Flesch Reading Ease Score and Flesch
Kincaid Grade Level score metrics are used. The findings indicate that 9% of the websites in the sample had no privacy policy posted, and only about 26% of the websites
in the sample fully complied with the FIP. The findings show that compliance with the FIP principles is poor, and confirm that most policies require a reading skill higher than the Internet population's average literacy level.
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Date
2011 – 7 – 28
Institution
CERIAS
Key alpha
Savla
Organization
CERIAS
School
Purdue University
Affiliation
Graduate Student (Master's)
Publication Date
2011-07-28

