Scholars and commentators often argue that individuals do not care about their privacy, and that users routinely trade privacy for convenience. This ignores the cognitive biases and design tactics platforms use to manipulate users into disclosing information. This essay highlights some of those cognitive biases – from hyperbolic discounting to the problem of overchoice – and discusses the ways in which platform design can manipulate disclosure. It then explains how current law allows this manipulative and anti-consumer behavior to continue and proposes a new approach to reign in the phenomenon
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
The discrepancy between individuals’ intention to disclose data and their actual disclosure behaviou...
Connected products and applications increasingly leverage users’ personal data in their core functio...
Scholars and commentators often argue that individuals do not care about their privacy, and that use...
The concerns individuals express over the privacy of their personal information could inhibit them f...
In this article, Professor Daniel Solove deconstructs and critiques the privacy paradox and the argu...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
The growing access to private information has been amplifying concerns of privacy compromise. Althou...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
peer reviewedThis paper examines the effect of the dark pattern strategy ``loss-gain framing'' on us...
peer reviewedThis paper examines the effect of the dark pattern strategy ``loss-gain framing'' on us...
The privacy paradox is a phenomenon whereby individuals continue to disclose their personal informat...
In this paper, we run a series of experiments in order to investigate one possible cause of inconsis...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
The discrepancy between individuals’ intention to disclose data and their actual disclosure behaviou...
Connected products and applications increasingly leverage users’ personal data in their core functio...
Scholars and commentators often argue that individuals do not care about their privacy, and that use...
The concerns individuals express over the privacy of their personal information could inhibit them f...
In this article, Professor Daniel Solove deconstructs and critiques the privacy paradox and the argu...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
The growing access to private information has been amplifying concerns of privacy compromise. Althou...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
peer reviewedThis paper examines the effect of the dark pattern strategy ``loss-gain framing'' on us...
peer reviewedThis paper examines the effect of the dark pattern strategy ``loss-gain framing'' on us...
The privacy paradox is a phenomenon whereby individuals continue to disclose their personal informat...
In this paper, we run a series of experiments in order to investigate one possible cause of inconsis...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
The discrepancy between individuals’ intention to disclose data and their actual disclosure behaviou...
Connected products and applications increasingly leverage users’ personal data in their core functio...