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Renouncing Privacy in Crisis Management? People's View on Social Media Monitoring and Surveillance
Larissa Aldehoff
author
2019
Iscram
Valencia, Spain
English
Social media is used during crises and disasters by state authorities and citizens to communicate and provide, gain
and analyze information. Monitoring of platforms in such cases is both a well-established practice and a research
area. The question, whether people are willing to renounce privacy in social media during critical incidents, or
even allow surveillance in order to contribute to public security, remains unanswered. Our survey of 1,024 German
inhabitants is the first empirical study on people�s views on social media monitoring and surveillance in crisis
management. We find the willingness to share data during an imminent threat depends mostly on the type of data:
a majority (63% and 67%, respectively) would give access to addresses and telephone numbers, whereas the
willingness to share content of chats or telephone calls is significantly lower (27%). Our analysis reveals diverging
opinions among participants and some effects of sociodemographic variables on the acceptance of invasions into
privacy.
Social Media
Privacy
Security
Crisis Management
Surveillance
exported from refbase (http://idl.iscram.org/show.php?record=1850), last updated on Fri, 22 Nov 2019 10:57:13 +0100
text
http://idl.iscram.org/files/larissaaldehoff/2019/1850_LarissaAldehoff2019.pdf
LarissaAldehoff2019
Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response And Management
Iscram 2019
Franco
Z
editor
González
J
J
editor
Canós
J
H
editor
16th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management (ISCRAM 2019)
2019
Iscram
Valencia, Spain
conference publication
978-84-09-10498-7
2411-3387
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