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Investigating user perceptions of mobile app privacy: An analysis of user-submitted app reviews
Authors
Andrew R. Besmer
M. Shane Banks
Jason Watson
Publication date
1 October 2020
Publisher
UNA Scholarly Repository
Abstract
© 2020, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited. Mobile devices and third-party applications are used by over 4.5 billion people worldwide. Third-party applications often request or even require authorized access to personal information through mobile device components. Application developers explain the need for access in their privacy policies, yet many users are concerned about the privacy implications of allowing access to their personal information. This article explores how user perceptions of privacy affect user sentiment by analyzing over five million user-submitted text reviews and star ratings collected over a four-year period. The authors use supervised machine learning to classify privacy and non-privacy-related reviews. The authors then use natural language processing sentiment analysis to compare differences between the groups. Additionally, the article explores various aspects of both privacy and non-privacy-related reviews using self-reported measurements such as star rating and helpfulness tags
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Last time updated on 26/11/2020