International audienceUsing a Markov-perfect equilibrium model, we show that the use of customer data to practice intertemporal price discrimination will improve monopoly profit if and only if information precision is higher than a certain threshold level. This U-shaped relationship lends support to a popular view that knowledge is good only if it is sufficiently refined. When information accuracy can only be achieved through costly investment, we find that investing in profiling is profitable only if this allows to reach a high enough level of information precision. Consumers expected surplus being a hump-shaped function of information accuracy, we show that consumers have an incentive to lobby for privacy protection legislation which rais...
A monopolist can use a 'tracking' technology that allows it to identify a consumer's willingness to ...
Advances in information technologies have increasingly enabled firms to use consumers' past purchasi...
This paper studies how product customization and consumer privacy affect a monopolist’s incentives t...
International audienceUsing a Markov-perfect equilibrium model, we show that the use of customer dat...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy improvements in ...
International audienceWe consider a nondurable good monopolist that collects data on its customers i...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy improvements in ...
We consider a model where a monopolist can profile consumers in order to price discriminate among th...
In this article, we develop a model encompassing behavior-based discriminatory pricing as a limit ca...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy im-provements in...
Recent developments in information technology (IT) have resulted in the collection of a vast amount ...
A monopolist can use a ‘tracking’ technology to identify a consumer’s willingness to pay with some p...
International audienceWe present a model of market hyper-segmentation, where a monopolist acquires w...
This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus,...
A monopolist can use a 'tracking' technology that allows it to identify a consumer's willingness to ...
Advances in information technologies have increasingly enabled firms to use consumers' past purchasi...
This paper studies how product customization and consumer privacy affect a monopolist’s incentives t...
International audienceUsing a Markov-perfect equilibrium model, we show that the use of customer dat...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy improvements in ...
International audienceWe consider a nondurable good monopolist that collects data on its customers i...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy improvements in ...
We consider a model where a monopolist can profile consumers in order to price discriminate among th...
In this article, we develop a model encompassing behavior-based discriminatory pricing as a limit ca...
This paper investigates the competitive and welfare effects of information accuracy im-provements in...
Recent developments in information technology (IT) have resulted in the collection of a vast amount ...
A monopolist can use a ‘tracking’ technology to identify a consumer’s willingness to pay with some p...
International audienceWe present a model of market hyper-segmentation, where a monopolist acquires w...
This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus,...
A monopolist can use a 'tracking' technology that allows it to identify a consumer's willingness to ...
Advances in information technologies have increasingly enabled firms to use consumers' past purchasi...
This paper studies how product customization and consumer privacy affect a monopolist’s incentives t...