Adapting ubicomp software and its evaluation
Proceedings of the 1st ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
Trained to accept?: a field experiment on consent dialogs
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
CenceMe: injecting sensing presence into social networking applications
EuroSSC'07 Proceedings of the 2nd European conference on Smart sensing and context
AppAware: which mobile applications are hot?
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services
TaintDroid: an information-flow tracking system for realtime privacy monitoring on smartphones
OSDI'10 Proceedings of the 9th USENIX conference on Operating systems design and implementation
Categorised ethical guidelines for large scale mobile HCI
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM International Symposium on Pervasive Displays
Upright or sideways?: analysis of smartphone postures in the wild
Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services
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The HCI community has begun to use 'app store'-style software repositories as a distribution channel for research applications. A number of ethical challenges present themselves in this setting, not least that of gaining informed consent from potential participants before logging data on their use of the software. We note that standard 'terms and conditions' pages have proved unsuccessful in communicating relevant information to users, and explore further means of conveying researchers' intent and allowing opt-out mechanisms. We test the hypothesis that revealing collected information to users will affect their level of concern at being recorded and find that users are more concerned when presented with a personalised representation of recorded data, and consequently stop using the application sooner. Also described is a means of allowing between-groups experiments in such mass participation trials.