|   | CMU-CS-03-165 Computer Science Department
 School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
 
    
     
 CMU-CS-03-165
 
Navigating Computer Science Research Through Waves of Privacy Concerns:Discussions among Computer Scientists at Carnegie Mellon University
 
Latanya Sweeney, Editor 
July 2003  
Also appears asKeywords: Computer Science Research, privacy, Institute Review Board, 
de-identification, policyInstitute for Software Research International
 Technical Report CMU-ISRI-03-102
 
CMU-CS-03-165.psCMU-CS-03-165.pdf
 
 Computer Science research and practice are raising growing privacy 
concerns among the public and government. Computer technology's 
increasing ability to capture, organize, interpret and share data 
about individuals raises questions about what privacy practices 
computer science researchers should adopt, if any. These issues are 
already very real in ongoing research projects in the School of 
Computer Science (SCS) at Carnegie Mellon University, from mining 
databases of individual transactions, to studying how people use 
the web, to mounting cameras in lounges, to building hallway robots 
that capture data about passers by, to building intelligent 
workstation assistants that learn user habits. This paper introduces 
the nature of privacy concerns often related to computer science 
research, explains potential benefits and risks (especially of abuse 
and misuse) and examines traditional and innovative methods for 
providing privacy assurances in research. Examples are provided 
from projects at Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science.
 
19 pages 
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