Seesoft-A Tool for Visualizing Line Oriented Software Statistics
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering - Special issue on software measurement principles, techniques, and environments
ThemeRiver: Visualizing Thematic Changes in Large Document Collections
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
Visualization for the document space
VIS '92 Proceedings of the 3rd conference on Visualization '92
Understanding Eight Years of InfoVis Conferences Using PaperLens
INFOVIS '04 Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization
NSPW '06 Proceedings of the 2006 workshop on New security paradigms
An honest man has nothing to fear: user perceptions on web-based information disclosure
Proceedings of the 3rd symposium on Usable privacy and security
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Free online tools such as search, email and mapping come with a cost. Web users obtain such services by making micropayments of personal and organizational information to the web service providers. Web companies use this information to create customized advertising and tailored user experiences. Individually, each transaction appears innocuous, but when aggregated, the result is often highly sensitive. The impact of AOL.s inadvertent disclosure of 20 million nominally anonymized search queries underscores the pressing need for increasing web privacy and raising user awareness of the problem. Rather than advocate extreme legal and policy measures to address the dilemma, this paper proposes an equitable self-monitoring solution. Self-monitoring allows individual users and large enterprises to regulate their web-based interactions intelligently and still allow online companies to innovate and flourish. The primary contributions of our work includes exploration of visualization techniques that support self-monitoring, a human-centric evaluation and the results of a user requirements survey.