Privacy statements too complex: Microsoft

By
Follow google news

Business urged to keep it simple.

Microsoft’s security strategist has urged organisations to dump verbose privacy documents saying they only confuse users.

Privacy statements too complex: Microsoft

Scott Charney said users were “overloaded” with information in lengthy privacy documents and could not be reasonably expected to trawl through dozens of pages.

“Even if you had the knowledge to read it through, you’d never finish,” Charney told media at Microsoft’s Redmond headquarters. “There’s a lot of debate on notice and choice, but now users get so many privacy statements they don’t know what to do with them.”

Instead, privacy documents should be shortened to a single page and dump obvious privacy clauses such as the need for users to supply shipping addresses for goods purchased online.

But lengthy statements should still be made available for “lawyers and privacy experts” to peruse.

The call comes on the back of Microsoft’s own move to simplify its privacy policies, however exactly what this will involve was unknown.

“In the early years we put too much burden on users – we need to provide more direct and actionable information to users, rather than just throw stuff at them,” Charney said.

Darren Pauli travelled to Redmond as a guest of Microsoft. 

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.

Copyright © SC Magazine, Australia

Tags:

Most Read Articles

Services Australia may get powers to rein in data breach exposure

Services Australia may get powers to rein in data breach exposure

ServiceNow nears deal to buy cyber security startup

ServiceNow nears deal to buy cyber security startup

Apple, Google send new round of cyber threat notifications to users

Apple, Google send new round of cyber threat notifications to users

ASX outage caused by security software upgrade

ASX outage caused by security software upgrade

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?