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Main Authors: Kahn, Zoe, Pere, Meyebinesso Farida Carelle, Aiken, Emily, Kohli, Nitin, Blumenstock, Joshua E.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.17578
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author Kahn, Zoe
Pere, Meyebinesso Farida Carelle
Aiken, Emily
Kohli, Nitin
Blumenstock, Joshua E.
author_facet Kahn, Zoe
Pere, Meyebinesso Farida Carelle
Aiken, Emily
Kohli, Nitin
Blumenstock, Joshua E.
contents Passively collected "big" data sources are increasingly used to inform critical development policy decisions in low- and middle-income countries. While prior work highlights how such approaches may reveal sensitive information, enable surveillance, and centralize power, less is known about the corresponding privacy concerns, hopes, and fears of the people directly impacted by these policies -- people sometimes referred to as experiential experts. To understand the perspectives of experiential experts, we conducted semi-structured interviews with people living in rural villages in Togo shortly after an entirely digital cash transfer program was launched that used machine learning and mobile phone metadata to determine program eligibility. This paper documents participants' privacy concerns surrounding the introduction of big data approaches in development policy. We find that the privacy concerns of our experiential experts differ from those raised by privacy and development domain experts. To facilitate a more robust and constructive account of privacy, we discuss implications for policies and designs that take seriously the privacy concerns raised by both experiential experts and domain experts.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_17578
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Expanding Perspectives on Data Privacy: Insights from Rural Togo
Kahn, Zoe
Pere, Meyebinesso Farida Carelle
Aiken, Emily
Kohli, Nitin
Blumenstock, Joshua E.
Human-Computer Interaction
Passively collected "big" data sources are increasingly used to inform critical development policy decisions in low- and middle-income countries. While prior work highlights how such approaches may reveal sensitive information, enable surveillance, and centralize power, less is known about the corresponding privacy concerns, hopes, and fears of the people directly impacted by these policies -- people sometimes referred to as experiential experts. To understand the perspectives of experiential experts, we conducted semi-structured interviews with people living in rural villages in Togo shortly after an entirely digital cash transfer program was launched that used machine learning and mobile phone metadata to determine program eligibility. This paper documents participants' privacy concerns surrounding the introduction of big data approaches in development policy. We find that the privacy concerns of our experiential experts differ from those raised by privacy and development domain experts. To facilitate a more robust and constructive account of privacy, we discuss implications for policies and designs that take seriously the privacy concerns raised by both experiential experts and domain experts.
title Expanding Perspectives on Data Privacy: Insights from Rural Togo
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.17578