Privacy Reasoning in Ambiguous Contexts
–Neural Information Processing Systems
We study the ability of language models to reason about appropriate information disclosure--a central aspect of the evolving field of agentic privacy. Whereas previous works have focused on evaluating a model's ability to align with human decisions, we examine the role of ambiguity and missing context on model performance when making information-sharing decisions. We identify context ambiguity as a crucial barrier for high performance in privacy assessments. By designing Camber, a framework for context disambiguation, we show that model-generated decision rationales can reveal ambiguities and that systematically disambiguating context based on these rationales leads to significant accuracy improvements (up to 13.3% in precision and up to 22.3% in recall) as well as reductions in prompt sensitivity. Overall, our results indicate that approaches for context disambiguation are a promising way forward to enhance agentic privacy reasoning.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Jun-23-2026, 03:11:14 GMT
- Country:
- North America > Mexico (0.27)
- Genre:
- Research Report
- New Finding (1.00)
- Experimental Study (1.00)
- Research Report
- Industry:
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Law (0.93)
- Education (0.67)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Psychiatry/Psychology (0.67)
- Technology: