PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Paths to social licence for tracking-data analytics in university research and services.

  • Joshua P White,
  • Simon Dennis,
  • Martin Tomko,
  • Jessica Bell,
  • Stephan Winter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251964
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 5
p. e0251964

Abstract

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While tracking-data analytics can be a goldmine for institutions and companies, the inherent privacy concerns also form a legal, ethical and social minefield. We present a study that seeks to understand the extent and circumstances under which tracking-data analytics is undertaken with social licence-that is, with broad community acceptance beyond formal compliance with legal requirements. Taking a University campus environment as a case, we enquire about the social licence for Wi-Fi-based tracking-data analytics. Staff and student participants answered a questionnaire presenting hypothetical scenarios involving Wi-Fi tracking for university research and services. Our results present a Bayesian logistic mixed-effects regression of acceptability judgements as a function of participant ratings on 11 privacy dimensions. Results show widespread acceptance of tracking-data analytics on campus and suggest that trust, individual benefit, data sensitivity, risk of harm and institutional respect for privacy are the most predictive factors determining this acceptance judgement.