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Journal ArticleDOI

Internet privacy concerns: an integrated conceptualization and four empirical studies

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TLDR
In this article, the authors identify alternative conceptualizations of Internet privacy concerns (IPC) based on multidimensional developmental theory and a review of the prior literature and examine the various conceptualizations with four online surveys involving nearly 4,000 Internet users.
Abstract
Internet privacy concerns (IPC) is an area of study that is receiving increased attention due to the huge amount of personal information being gathered, stored, transmitted, and published on the Internet. While there is an emerging literature on IPC, there is limited agreement about its conceptualization in terms of its key dimensions and its factor structure. Based on the multidimensional developmental theory and a review of the prior literature, we identify alternative conceptualizations of IPC. We examine the various conceptualizations of IPC with four online surveys involving nearly 4,000 Internet users. As a baseline, study 1 compares the integrated conceptualization of IPC to two existing conceptualizations in the literature. While the results provide support for the integrated conceptualization, the second-order factor model does not outperform the correlated first-order factor model. Study 2 replicates the study on a different sample and confirms the results of study 1. We also investigate whether the prior results are affected by the different perspectives adopted in the wording of items in the original instruments. In study 3, we find that focusing on one's concern for website behavior (rather than one's expectation of website behavior) and adopting a consistent perspective in the wording of the items help to improve the validity of the factor structure. We then examine the hypothesized third-order conceptualizations of IPC through a number of alternative higher-order models. The empirical results confirm that, in general, the third-order conceptualizations of IPC outperform their lower-order alternatives. In addition, the conceptualization of IPC that has the best fit with the data contains a third-order general IPC factor, two second-order factors of interaction management and information management, and six first-order factors (i.e., collection, secondary usage, errors, improper access, control, and awareness). Study 4 cross-validates the results with another data set and examines IPC within the context of a nomological network. The results confirm that the third-order conceptualization of IPC has nomological validity, and it is a significant determinant of both trusting beliefs and risk beliefs. Our research helps to resolve inconsistencies in the key underlying dimensions of IPC, the factor structure of IPC, and the wording of the original items in prior instruments of IPC. Finally, we discuss the implications of this research.

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Citations
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An Extended Privacy Calculus Model for SNSs: Analyzing Self-Disclosure and Self-Withdrawal in a Representative U.S. Sample

TL;DR: A U.S. representative sample was used to test the privacy calculus' generalizability and extend its theoretical framework by including both self-withdrawal behaviors and privacy self-efficacy, and results confirmed the extended privacy calculus model.
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TL;DR: The results suggest that service providers should address the issues of social influence and privacy concern to encourage mobile SNS continuance usage.
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Privacy in e-commerce: stated preferences vs. actual behavior

TL;DR: The possibility of a "transparent human," whose vital information is up for grabs, can most easily be envisioned in the realm of e-commerce, due in part to the large amounts of data available, and the high payoffs expected from using this data for marketing purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Information Privacy: Corporate Management and National Regulation

TL;DR: It is found that a country's regulatory approach to the corporate management of information privacy is affected by its cultural values and by individuals' information privacy concerns, and that the self-regulatory model of privacy governance may not be sustainable over the long term.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analyzing Online Information Privacy Concerns: An Information Processing Theory Approach

TL;DR: It is found that benefits—monetary reward and future convenience—significantly affect individuals' preferences over Web sites with differing privacy policies, and the value of Web site privacy protection is quantified.
Journal ArticleDOI

International differences in information privacy concerns: A global survey of consumers

TL;DR: This article examined three possible explanations for differences in Internet privacy concerns revealed by national regulation: (1) These differences reflect and are related to differences in cultural values described by other research, (2) these differences reflect differences in internet experience; or (3) they reflect the differences in the desires of political institutions without reflecting underlying differences in privacy preferences.
Journal IssueDOI

Development of measures of online privacy concern and protection for use on the Internet

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the development and validation of three short Internet-administered scales measuring privacy-related attitudes (Privacy Concern) and behaviors (General Caution and Technical Protection).
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