Implications of smartphone user privacy leakage from the advertiser’s perspective
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Abstract
Many smartphone apps routinely gather various private user data and send them to advertisers. Despite recent study on protection mechanisms and analysis on apps’ behavior, the understanding of the consequences of such privacy losses remains limited. In this paper, we investigate how much an advertiser can infer about users’ social and community relationships. After one month’s user study involving about 190 most popular Android apps, we find that an advertiser can infer 90% of the social relationships. We further propose a privacy leakage inference framework and use real mobility traces and Foursquare data to quantify the consequences of privacy leakage. We find that achieving 90% inference accuracy of the social and community relationships requires merely 3 weeks’ user data. Finally, we present a real-time privacy leakage visualization tool that captures and displays the spatial–temporal characteristics of the leakages. The discoveries underscore the importance of early adoption of privacy protection mechanisms.