Personal data is becoming more and more valuable because of new possibilities in gathering and analyzing data. Although, users integrate information systems in their most private spheres, they do not take adequate care of their privacy. In fact, they are becoming increasingly concerned about their information privacy, but act in a different way. This inconsistency in users’ behavior is known as privacy paradox. This paper takes up the psychometric measurement of future self-continuity and investigates the relationship to selected constructs of information privacy research. The results show significant correlations to the concerns users have about their privacy – an increasing future self-continuity is related with higher concerns. Thus, use...
The widespread adoption of digital technologies has dramatically increased the concerns over invasio...
With the Internet growing in importance in our daily lives, concerns about privacy and data protecti...
The study contributes to the ongoing debate about the ‘privacy paradox’ in the context of using soci...
Personal data is becoming more and more valuable because of new possibilities in gathering and analy...
The concerns individuals express over the privacy of their personal information could inhibit them f...
Informational privacy of individuals has significantly gained importance after information technolog...
The personalization-privacy paradox operates as a continuous, tension-charged cycle. Although consum...
To reconcile the personalization-privacy paradox, we adopt the privacy as a state view and define pr...
The privacy paradox states that people’s concerns about online privacy are unrelated to their online...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
The privacy paradox phenomenon suggests that individuals tend to make privacy decisions (i.e., discl...
Prior research shows that Social Network Sites (SNS) users who are concerned about personal privacy ...
The discrepancy between individuals’ intention to disclose data and their actual disclosure behaviou...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
People's decisions do not happen in a vacuum; there are multiple factors that may affect them. There...
The widespread adoption of digital technologies has dramatically increased the concerns over invasio...
With the Internet growing in importance in our daily lives, concerns about privacy and data protecti...
The study contributes to the ongoing debate about the ‘privacy paradox’ in the context of using soci...
Personal data is becoming more and more valuable because of new possibilities in gathering and analy...
The concerns individuals express over the privacy of their personal information could inhibit them f...
Informational privacy of individuals has significantly gained importance after information technolog...
The personalization-privacy paradox operates as a continuous, tension-charged cycle. Although consum...
To reconcile the personalization-privacy paradox, we adopt the privacy as a state view and define pr...
The privacy paradox states that people’s concerns about online privacy are unrelated to their online...
As a starting point, this essay offers six basic propositions. First, the \u27privacy paradox\u27 ...
The privacy paradox phenomenon suggests that individuals tend to make privacy decisions (i.e., discl...
Prior research shows that Social Network Sites (SNS) users who are concerned about personal privacy ...
The discrepancy between individuals’ intention to disclose data and their actual disclosure behaviou...
The study is an examination of the antecedents to the paradoxical changes in the consumers’ intended...
People's decisions do not happen in a vacuum; there are multiple factors that may affect them. There...
The widespread adoption of digital technologies has dramatically increased the concerns over invasio...
With the Internet growing in importance in our daily lives, concerns about privacy and data protecti...
The study contributes to the ongoing debate about the ‘privacy paradox’ in the context of using soci...