Designing a Social Protocol: Lessons Learned from the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project. Cranor, L., Reagle, J., Mackie-Mason, J., & Waterman, D. Designing a Social Protocol: Lessons Learned from the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1998.
abstract   bibtex   
The Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3), under development by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), enables users and Web sites to reach explicit agreements regarding sites’ data privacy practices. The options chosen in developing the protocols, grammar, and vocabulary needed for an agreement lead the authors to a number of generalizations regarding the development of technology designed for "social" purposes. In this paper we will explain the goals of P3; discuss the importance of simplicity, layering, and defaults in the development of social protocols; and examine the sometimes-difficult relationship between technical and policy decisions in this domain.
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 title = {Designing a Social Protocol: Lessons Learned from the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project},
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 year = {1998},
 publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates},
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 short_title = {Designing a Social Protocol},
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 abstract = {The Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3), under development by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), enables users and Web sites to reach explicit agreements regarding sites’ data privacy practices. The options chosen in developing the protocols, grammar, and vocabulary needed for an agreement lead the authors to a number of generalizations regarding the development of technology designed for "social" purposes.
      
      In this paper we will explain the goals of P3; discuss the importance of simplicity, layering, and defaults in the development of social protocols; and examine the sometimes-difficult relationship between technical and policy decisions in this domain.},
 bibtype = {inBook},
 author = {Cranor, Lorrie and Reagle, Joseph and Mackie-Mason, Jeffrey and Waterman, David}
}

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