2020
DOI: 10.1080/1369118x.2020.1753798
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Millennial attitudes towards sharing mobile phone location data with health agencies: a qualitative study

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Cited by 6 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Only limited information is currently available to people tracked by mobile positioning systems, and this probably represents a significant barrier to the development of knowledge, norms and meaning in this area. This echoes other studies that have found that attitudes to sharing of locational data to a large degree depends on expected social benefits and the level of trust to the involved organizations ( Oliver et al., 2015 ; Murphy et al., 2020 ; Julsrud and Krogstad, 2018 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…Only limited information is currently available to people tracked by mobile positioning systems, and this probably represents a significant barrier to the development of knowledge, norms and meaning in this area. This echoes other studies that have found that attitudes to sharing of locational data to a large degree depends on expected social benefits and the level of trust to the involved organizations ( Oliver et al., 2015 ; Murphy et al., 2020 ; Julsrud and Krogstad, 2018 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Studies of young people have found that many intensive users of social media also routinely engage in privacy-protective behavior ( Marwick and Boyd, 2014 ). The current study adds to other works that have found that younger people are more aware of the possibilities for abuse of mobile phone data but also more accepting for sharing data ( Murphy et al., 2020 ; DMA 2018 )…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 61%
“…Since all literature related explicitly to C19CT apps is fairly new, we also briefly review privacy studies concerning sharing location and health data more generally, particularly due to people's common perception that C19CT apps use their personal location data. Location sharing apps are not new in any sense, and early research looked for example at people's willingness to share location data (e.g., [4,8,9,29]). Personal location sharing is almost exclusively facilitated through smartphones, for example through GPS-based map pointers or descriptive tags in social networks such as Facebook check-in [41].…”
Section: Sharing Of Location Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Brush et al found people to prefer different location obfuscations strategies, and that privacy control interfaces should provide users with informed choices [8]. In a health context, Murphy et al found young adults to be positive about sharing mobile phone location data to improve public healthcare [29]. Moreover, they argued that more education on data collection, storage and protection can "ease concerns and prevent hesitancy" toward location data sharing [29].…”
Section: Sharing Of Location Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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