Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Improving Cookie Consent Notice Communication and Usability via DSR

View through CrossRef
Cookie consent notices frequently fail to communicate data practices clearly or support meaningful user privacy choices. This study addressed that problem through a Design Science Research (DSR) approach, with two objectives: cataloguing prevalent cookie consent notice types on South African websites, and developing and evaluating an improved design artefact against those types. The 100 most popular South African websites were analysed, producing a typology of cookie consent designs. An improved artefact was then iteratively designed and assessed across three evaluation rounds. Expert usability testing found the artefact communicated data collection and third-party sharing more comprehensively than existing designs, earning excellent usability scores. A large-scale online experiment with 320 non-expert participants revealed that most typology designs performed poorly on privacy comprehension, with only one typology type exceeding the control. A further study with 275 participants confirmed the artefact's measurably better performance in both website data practice and cookie consent communication. The research makes both practical and theoretical contributions. Practically, it delivers a free, open-source, Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA)-compliant cookie consent notice that outperforms existing South African designs. Theoretically, it demonstrates that appropriate visualisations, specifically labelled icons, improve privacy communication by supporting multimedia learning, reducing cognitive load, and promoting recognition over recall. Easy-to-use choice mechanisms were also shown to significantly enhance usability. Limitations include the exclusive use of English materials in a multilingual population, suggesting future work should explore language and cultural effects on privacy notice comprehension.
Title: Improving Cookie Consent Notice Communication and Usability via DSR
Description:
Cookie consent notices frequently fail to communicate data practices clearly or support meaningful user privacy choices.
This study addressed that problem through a Design Science Research (DSR) approach, with two objectives: cataloguing prevalent cookie consent notice types on South African websites, and developing and evaluating an improved design artefact against those types.
The 100 most popular South African websites were analysed, producing a typology of cookie consent designs.
An improved artefact was then iteratively designed and assessed across three evaluation rounds.
Expert usability testing found the artefact communicated data collection and third-party sharing more comprehensively than existing designs, earning excellent usability scores.
A large-scale online experiment with 320 non-expert participants revealed that most typology designs performed poorly on privacy comprehension, with only one typology type exceeding the control.
A further study with 275 participants confirmed the artefact's measurably better performance in both website data practice and cookie consent communication.
The research makes both practical and theoretical contributions.
Practically, it delivers a free, open-source, Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA)-compliant cookie consent notice that outperforms existing South African designs.
Theoretically, it demonstrates that appropriate visualisations, specifically labelled icons, improve privacy communication by supporting multimedia learning, reducing cognitive load, and promoting recognition over recall.
Easy-to-use choice mechanisms were also shown to significantly enhance usability.
Limitations include the exclusive use of English materials in a multilingual population, suggesting future work should explore language and cultural effects on privacy notice comprehension.

Related Results

Designing TRiDS: Treatments for Risks in Design Science
Designing TRiDS: Treatments for Risks in Design Science
Design Science Research (DSR) has many risks. Researchers inexperienced in DSR, especially early career researchers (ECRs) and research students (e.g. PhD students) risk inefficien...
Usability Quality Model: An Enhancement of Dromey's Model
Usability Quality Model: An Enhancement of Dromey's Model
ABSTRACT Usability is a fundamental software quality attribute that strongly influences user performance, acceptance, and the overall success of software systems....
SUSTAINABLE MECHANIZED RICE ESTABLISHMENT SYSTEM IN KOSI REGION OF BIHAR INDIA
SUSTAINABLE MECHANIZED RICE ESTABLISHMENT SYSTEM IN KOSI REGION OF BIHAR INDIA
Rice cultivation in eastern India is increasingly constrained by labour scarcity, rising wage rates, and high-water demand associated with conventional puddled transplanting. Direc...
Are cookie banners indeed compliant with the law?
Are cookie banners indeed compliant with the law?
In this work, we analyze the legal requirements on how cookie banners are supposed to be implemented to be fully compliant with the ePrivacy Directive and the GDPR. Our contributi...
Enhancing dysarthric speech recognition through SepFormer and hierarchical attention network models with multistage transfer learning
Enhancing dysarthric speech recognition through SepFormer and hierarchical attention network models with multistage transfer learning
AbstractDysarthria, a motor speech disorder that impacts articulation and speech clarity, presents significant challenges for Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) systems. This study...
Autonomy on Trial
Autonomy on Trial
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash Abstract This paper critically examines how US bioethics and health law conceptualize patient autonomy, contrasting the rights-based, individualist...
The Cookie Monster Problem
The Cookie Monster Problem
This chapter examines the problem of the “Cookie Monster number.” In 2002, Cookie Monster® appeared in the book The Inquisitive Problem Solver ...
The Symbiosis of Design Science Research and Behavioral Science Research
The Symbiosis of Design Science Research and Behavioral Science Research
Purpose: The symbiosis of design science research (DSR) and behavioral science research (BSR) in information systems has been elusive. It is necessary for the advancement of both D...

Back to Top