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Family Preferences Concerning Online Privacy, Data Mining, and Targeted Ads
by
WILSON, JOSHUA S.
, CLEMONS, ERIC K.
in
Alternative approaches
/ Application
/ Attitudes
/ Classrooms
/ Data
/ Data mining
/ Education
/ Future
/ Inappropriateness
/ Information retrieval
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Merchants
/ Parent attitudes
/ Parents & parenting
/ Privacy
/ Regulation
/ Software
/ Special Section: Online Social Connections: Efficiency Versus Regulation
/ Student attitudes
/ Students
/ Studies
/ Transparency
/ User behavior
/ Willingness to pay
2015
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Family Preferences Concerning Online Privacy, Data Mining, and Targeted Ads
by
WILSON, JOSHUA S.
, CLEMONS, ERIC K.
in
Alternative approaches
/ Application
/ Attitudes
/ Classrooms
/ Data
/ Data mining
/ Education
/ Future
/ Inappropriateness
/ Information retrieval
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Merchants
/ Parent attitudes
/ Parents & parenting
/ Privacy
/ Regulation
/ Software
/ Special Section: Online Social Connections: Efficiency Versus Regulation
/ Student attitudes
/ Students
/ Studies
/ Transparency
/ User behavior
/ Willingness to pay
2015
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Do you wish to request the book?
Family Preferences Concerning Online Privacy, Data Mining, and Targeted Ads
by
WILSON, JOSHUA S.
, CLEMONS, ERIC K.
in
Alternative approaches
/ Application
/ Attitudes
/ Classrooms
/ Data
/ Data mining
/ Education
/ Future
/ Inappropriateness
/ Information retrieval
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Merchants
/ Parent attitudes
/ Parents & parenting
/ Privacy
/ Regulation
/ Software
/ Special Section: Online Social Connections: Efficiency Versus Regulation
/ Student attitudes
/ Students
/ Studies
/ Transparency
/ User behavior
/ Willingness to pay
2015
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Family Preferences Concerning Online Privacy, Data Mining, and Targeted Ads
Journal Article
Family Preferences Concerning Online Privacy, Data Mining, and Targeted Ads
2015
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Overview
Young Internet users engage in risky or inappropriate behavior online that could either be embarrassing or harmful to their future. As importantly, young Internet users engage in online activities that reveal a great deal about the cost to serve them and their willingness to pay for goods and services, which could be used against them by well-informed sellers. Educational applications that collect users’ information are becoming ubiquitous in the classroom, presenting the opportunity for students’ data to be mined. We are not aware of prior studies that examine parental or students’ attitudes and preferences toward data mining of educational application accounts, and how these attitudes differ across several countries. We used three survey instruments to measure parents’ and students’ attitudes toward data mining of educational applications. Parents in all countries studied prefer far less data mining of students’ online activities than seems to be the current practice. Most importantly, aversion to data mining does not seem to be correlated with awareness of current practices of data mining of teens’ activities. This study highlights regulatory alternatives and suggests future research and future data requirements for designing appropriate regulatory interventions. The nature of the intervention will be guided by the nature of the causes of inappropriate online behavior and inappropriate selection of educational software. Intervention could range from no regulation needed, through providing greater transparency, to new and detailed legal requirements that software providers must meet.
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