Author List: Xu, Heng; Teo, Hock-Hai; Tan, Bernard C. Y.; Agarwal, Ritu;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2009, Volume 26, Issue 3, Page 135-173.
Location-based services (LBS) use positioning technologies to provide individual users with reachability and accessibility that would otherwise not be available in the conventional commercial realm. While LBS confer greater connectivity and personalization on consumers, they also threaten users' information privacy through granular tracking of their preferences, behaviors, and identity. To address privacy concerns in the LBS context, this study extends the privacy calculus model to explore the role of information delivery mechanisms (pull and push) in the efficacy of three privacy intervention approaches (compensation, industry self-regulation, and government regulation) in influencing individual privacy decision making. The research model was tested using data gathered from 528 respondents through a quasi-experimental survey method. Structural equations modeling using partial least squares validated the instrument and the proposed model. Results suggest that the effects of the three privacy intervention approaches on an individual's privacy calculus vary based on the type of information delivery mechanism (pull and push). Results suggest that providing financial compensation for push-based LBS is more important than it is for pull-based LBS. Moreover, this study shows that privacy advocates and government legislators should not treat all types of LBS as undifferentiated but could instead specifically target certain types of services.
Keywords: compensation; distributive justice; government regulation; industry self-regulation; information delivery mechanisms; location-based services (LBS); privacy calculus; procedural justice
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#239 0.331 privacy information concerns individuals personal disclosure protection concern consumers practices control data private calculus regulation risk individual legislation government sensitive
#108 0.148 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#0 0.095 information types different type sources analysis develop used behavior specific conditions consider improve using alternative understanding data available main target
#49 0.081 adoption diffusion technology adopters innovation adopt process information potential innovations influence new characteristics early adopting set compatibility time initial current
#211 0.067 service services delivery quality providers technology information customer business provider asp e-service role variability science propose logic companies especially customers
#200 0.058 banking bank multilevel banks level individual implementation analysis resistance financial suggests modeling group large bank's services levels national data early
#92 0.051 equity conventional punishment justice wisdom focus behavior fairness compliance suggest theory significant certainty misuse reward settings behavioral mandatory drawing widely