PRIVACY AS CONTEXTUAL INTEGRITY Helen Nissenbaum* Abstract: The practices of public surveillance, which include the monitoring of individuals in public through a variety of media (e.g., video, data, online), are among the least understood and controversial challenges to privacy in an age of information technologies. "Privacy and Contextual Integrity: Framework and Applications To the best of our knowledge, one line of work approaches privacy as con-textual integrity by proposing a formal language for expressing generic privacy expectations [28]. Abstract Contextual integrity is a conceptual framework for understanding privacy expectations and their implications developed in the literature on law, public policy, and political philosophy. Contextual integrity is a conceptual framework for understanding privacy expectations and their implications developed in the literature on law, public policy, and political philosophy. We formalize some aspects of contextual integrity in a logical framework for expressing and reasoning about norms of transmission of personal information. We formalize some aspects of contextual integrity in a logical framework for expressing and reasoning about norms of transmission of personal information. wrong [10]. Web, smartphone, IoT systems), and has led to many tools, frameworks, and system designs that help study and address these privacy … As a conceptual framework, contextual integrity has been used to analyze and understand the privacy implications of socio-technical systems on a wide array of platforms (e.g. Protecting privacy Download PDF: Sorry, we are unable to provide the full text but you may find it at the following location(s): http://theory.stanford.edu/peo... (external link) The purpose of the theory of Contextual Integrity is to formulate a justificatory framework to settle the disputes involving new technical applications. Contextual Integrity: Corner Stones Contextual Integrity based on two corner stones: Appropriateness Norms about what is appropriate within context Norms about what is not appropriate within context Allowable, expected, demanded information Distribution Norms about information flow Free choice, discretion, confidentiality, need, Contextual Integrity serves as an important framework in achieving this and informing the rest of the privacy outcomes that NTIA has published. We formalize some aspects of contextual integrity in a logical framework for expressing and reasoning about norms of transmission of personal information. In the United States, notice-and-consent remains the fallback approach in online privacy policies, despite its weaknesses. Nissenbaum proposed such a framework in her formulation of privacy as contextual integrity [27]. We take the problem one Contextual integrity is a conceptual framework for understanding privacy expectations and their implications developed in the literature on law, public policy, and political philosophy. Formally, contextual Integrity (CI) defines privacy as an appropriate information flow, where appropriateness, in turn, is defined as conformance with legitimate, informational norms. Abstract: Contextual integrity is a conceptual framework for understanding privacy expectations and their implications developed in the literature on law, public policy, and political philosophy. CiteSeerX - Scientific documents that cite the following paper: et al. This essay presents an alternative approach, rooted in the theory of contextual integrity. How to protect privacy online is a frequent question in public discourse and has reignited the interest of government actors.