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Original Articles

Privacy, Trust, and Self-Disclosure Online

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Pages 1-24 | Published online: 29 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

Despite increased concern about the privacy threat posed by new technology and the Internet, there is relatively little evidence that people's privacy concerns translate to privacy-enhancing behaviors while online. In Study 1, measures of privacy concern are collected, followed 6 weeks later by a request for intrusive personal information alongside measures of trust in the requestor and perceived privacy related to the specific request (n = 759). Participants' dispositional privacy concerns, as well as their level of trust in the requestor and perceived privacy during the interaction, predicted whether they acceded to the request for personal information, although the impact of perceived privacy was mediated by trust. In Study 2, privacy and trust were experimentally manipulated and disclosure measured (n = 180). The results indicated that privacy and trust at a situational level interact such that high trust compensates for low privacy, and vice versa. Implications for understanding the links between privacy attitudes, trust, design, and actual behavior are discussed.

Notes

Background. An earlier version of the research reported in Study 1 was presented as a work-in-progress paper at CHI '06 (Paine et al., Privacy and Self-Disclosure Online, CHI '06 Extended Abstracts).

Acknowledgments. The authors are grateful to Jonathan Grudin and three anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments on this work.

Support. The work reported in this article was supported by funding from the UK Economic and Social Research Council E-Society Programme (RES-341-25-0011) awarded to Joinson, Buchanan, and Reips.

HCI Editorial Record. First manuscript received May 2, 2007. Revisions received June 27, 2007 and March 18, 2008. Accepted by Jonathan Grudin. Final manuscript received May 1, 2009.—Editor.

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