Contextual integrity
Theory of privacy / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Contextual integrity is a theory of privacy developed by Helen Nissenbaum and presented in her book Privacy In Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life.[1] It comprises four essential descriptive claims:
- Privacy is provided by appropriate flows of information.
- Appropriate information flows are those that conform with contextual information norms
- Contextual informational norms refer to five independent parameters: data subject, sender, recipient, information type, and transmission principle
- Conceptions of privacy are based on ethical concerns that evolve over time
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