Privacy Policies

Privacy Policies

Ethical Ambiguities in the Privacy Policies of Mobile Health and Fitness Applications, the Law and other Social Sciences

Personal Applications (apps) collect all sorts of personal information like name, email address, age, height, weight and in some cases detailed health information. When using such apps, many users trustfully log everything from diet to sleep patterns. Studies suggest that many applications do not have a privacy policy, or users do not have access to an app's permissions before s/he downloads it to the mobile device. This raises questions regarding the ethics around sharing personal data gathered from health and fitness apps to third parties. Despite the important role of informed consent in the creation of health and fitness mobile applications, the intersection of ethics and sharing of personal information is understudied and is an often-ignored topic during the creation of mobile applications. After reviewing the online privacy policies of four mobile health and fitness apps, this topic concludes with a set of recommendations when designing privacy policies to share personal information collected from health and fitness apps.[1]

Resources

Notes and References

  1. Devjani Sen, Rukhsana Ahmed, “Ethical Ambiguities in the Privacy Policies of Mobile Health and Fitness Applications” (Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, 4th Edition, Information Resources Management Association, 2018)

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