Trustworthy Privacy Indicators: Grades, Labels, Certifications and Dashboards
https://ssrn.com/abstract=3342747

Abstract

Despite numerous groups’ efforts to score, grade, label, and rate the privacy 
of websites, apps, and network-connected devices, these attempts at privacy 
indicators have, thus far, not been widely adopted. Privacy policies, however, 
remain long, complex, and impractical for consumers. Communicating in some 
short-hand form, synthesized privacy content is now crucial to empower internet 
users and provide them more meaningful notice, as well as nudge consumers and 
data processors toward more meaningful privacy. Indeed, on the basis of these 
needs, the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the Federal Trade 
Commission in the United States, as well as lawmakers and policymakers in the 
European Union, have advocated for the development of privacy indicator systems.

Efforts to develop privacy grades, scores, labels, icons, certifications, 
seals, and dashboards have wrestled with various deficiencies and obstacles for 
the wide-scale deployment as meaningful and trustworthy privacy indicators. 
This paper seeks to identify and explain these deficiencies and obstacles that 
have hampered past and current attempts. With these lessons, the article then 
offers criteria that will need to be established in law and policy for 
trustworthy indicators to be successfully deployed and adopted through 
technological tools. The lack of standardization prevents user-recognizability 
and dependability in the online marketplace, diminishes the ability to create 
automated tools for privacy, and reduces incentives for consumers and industry 
to invest in a privacy indicators. Flawed methods in selection and weighting of 
privacy evaluation criteria and issues interpreting language that is often 
ambiguous and vague jeopardize success and reliability when baked into an 
indicator of privacy protectiveness or invasiveness. Likewise, indicators fall 
short when those organizations rating or certifying the privacy practices are 
not objective, trustworthy, and sustainable.

Nonetheless, trustworthy privacy rating systems that are meaningful, accurate, 
and adoptable can be developed to assure effective and enduring empowerment of 
consumers. This paper proposes a framework using examples from prior and 
current attempts to create privacy indicator systems in order to provide a 
valuable resource for present-day, real world policymaking.

First, privacy rating systems need an objective and quantifiable basis that is 
fair and accountable to the public. Unlike previous efforts through industry 
self-regulation, if lawmakers and regulators establish standardized evaluation 
criteria for privacy practices and provide standards for how these criteria 
should be weighted in scoring techniques, the rating system will have public 
accountability with an objective, quantifiable basis. If automated rating 
mechanisms convey to users accepted descriptions of data practices or generate 
scores from privacy statements based on recognized criteria and weightings 
rather than from deductive conclusions, then this reduces interpretive issues 
with any privacy technology tool. Second, rating indicators should align with 
legal principles of contract interpretation and the existing legal defaults for 
the interpretation of silence in privacy policy language. Third, a standardized 
system of icons, along with guidelines as to where these should be located, 
will reduce the education and learning curve now necessary to understand and 
benefit from many different, inconsistent privacy indicator labeling systems. 
And lastly, privacy rating evaluators must be impartial, honest, autonomous, 
and financially and operationally durable in order to be successful.

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3342747


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