Businesses routinely buy and sell personal information about consumers. Many consumers find this objectionable, but relatively few of them opt out of that trade. This Article argues that businesses have both the incentive and the ability to increase consumers\u27 transaction costs in protecting their privacy and that some marketers do in fact inflate those costs. Faced with this and other constraints, many consumers ultimately decide not to protect their privacy. This Article proposes several ways by which consumers\u27 transaction costs can be reduced or eliminated
This article provides an analysis of the laws potentially applicable to the online collection and us...
U.S. privacy laws are increasingly moving from a presumption that consumers must object to ( opt o...
This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus,...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
(Excerpt) Accordingly, this Note proposes a contemporary-minded federal solution to preempt and stan...
The federal government as well as private companies maintain personality profile lists containing re...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
An individual\u27s right to privacy in an electronic society has gained international attention as a...
Many company Web sites obtain permission to disclose their users’ private information to third parti...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
Information technologies are reducing the costs of credible signaling, just as they have reduced the...
Online vendors use personal information to deliver customized services efficiently to their customer...
The article discusses U.S. consumer protection laws in relation to the efforts to keep personally id...
This article is about the ability of the consumer to control his or her destiny in the new electroni...
When firms can identify their past customers, they may use information about purchase histories in o...
This article provides an analysis of the laws potentially applicable to the online collection and us...
U.S. privacy laws are increasingly moving from a presumption that consumers must object to ( opt o...
This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus,...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
(Excerpt) Accordingly, this Note proposes a contemporary-minded federal solution to preempt and stan...
The federal government as well as private companies maintain personality profile lists containing re...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
An individual\u27s right to privacy in an electronic society has gained international attention as a...
Many company Web sites obtain permission to disclose their users’ private information to third parti...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
Information technologies are reducing the costs of credible signaling, just as they have reduced the...
Online vendors use personal information to deliver customized services efficiently to their customer...
The article discusses U.S. consumer protection laws in relation to the efforts to keep personally id...
This article is about the ability of the consumer to control his or her destiny in the new electroni...
When firms can identify their past customers, they may use information about purchase histories in o...
This article provides an analysis of the laws potentially applicable to the online collection and us...
U.S. privacy laws are increasingly moving from a presumption that consumers must object to ( opt o...
This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus,...