scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Web Security and Privacy: An American Perspective

L. Jean Camp
- 01 Nov 1999 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 4, pp 249-256
TLDR
It is argued that although privacy in Web browsing has no current legal protection in the United States, the right to privacy in the analogue equivalents has...
Abstract
Browsing the Web gives one the heady feeling of walking without footprints in cyberspace. Yet data surveillance can be both ubiquitous and transparent to the user. Can those who browse the Web protect their privacy? And does it matter if they cannot? I offer answers to these questions from the American legal tradition. The American legal tradition focuses on a right to privacy, rather than a need for data protection. To answer these questions I begin by delineating the differences among privacy, security, and anonymity. I then discuss what information is transferred during Web browsing. I describe some of the available technology for privacy protection, including public and private key cryptography and Web proxies. I then describe the American tradition of privacy in common, statutory, and constitutional law. With the support of this tradition, I close by arguing that although privacy in Web browsing has no current legal protection in the United States, the right to privacy in the analogue equivalents has...

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Citations
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Information privacy research: an interdisciplinary review

TL;DR: An interdisciplinary review of privacy-related research is provided in order to enable a more cohesive treatment and recommends that researchers be alert to an overarching macro model that is referred to as APCO (Antecedents → Privacy Concerns → Outcomes).
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Information privacy and correlates: an empirical attempt to bridge and distinguish privacy-related concepts

TL;DR: This study develops and tests a framework of information privacy and its correlates, based on the privacy theories of Westin and Altman, the economic view of the privacy calculus, and the identity management framework, that is useful for privacy advocates, and legal, management information systems, marketing, and social science scholars.
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Improving password security and memorability to protect personal and organizational information

TL;DR: Imposing password restrictions alone did not necessarily lead to more secure passwords, however, the use of a technique for which the first letter of each word of a sentence was used coupled with a requirement to insert a special character and digit yielded more secure password that were more memorable.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

File system design with assured delete

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Journal ArticleDOI

M-Commerce in Canada: An Interaction Framework for Wireless Privacy

TL;DR: In this paper, a new wireless privacy interaction framework is introduced which reflects the nature of interactions taking place between parties within a wireless environment, and the responsibilities of the interaction parties towards enhancing the privacy of the m-consumer are outlined.
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