Privacy Paradox Revised: Pre-Existing Attitudes, Psychological Ownership, and Actual Disclosure
ISBN
978-0-615-15788-7
Type
conference paper
Date Issued
2014-12-15
Author(s)
Abstract
Prior research has pointed to discrepancies between users' privacy concerns and disclosure behaviors, denoted as the privacy paradox, and repeatedly highlighted the importance to find explanations for this dichotomy. In this regard, three approaches have been proposed by prior literature: (1) use of actual disclosure behavior rather than behavioral intentions, (2) systematic distinction between pre-existing attitudes and situation-specific privacy considerations, and (3) limited and irrational cognitive processes during decision-making. The current research proposes an experiment capable to test these three assumptions simultaneously. More precisely, the authors aim to explore the contextual nature of privacy-related decisions by systematically manipulating (1) individuals' psychological ownership with regard to own private information, and (2) individuals' affective states, while measuring (3) pre-existing attitudes as well as situation-specific risk and benefit perceptions, and (4) intentions as well as actual disclosure. Thus, the proposed study strives to uniquely add to the understanding of the privacy paradox.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Book title
Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems - Building a Better World through Information Systems
Publisher
Association for Information Sytems
Publisher place
AIS Electronic Library (AISeL)
Start page
1
End page
15
Pages
15
Event Title
35th International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS 2014)
Event Location
Auckland, New Zealand
Event Date
14.-17.12.2014
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
242216
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Name
PDF Proof_revised.pdf
Size
2.48 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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