对等隐私问题:概念化和测量

MIS Q. Pub Date : 2022-02-28 DOI:10.25300/misq/2022/14861
Nan (Andy) Zhang, Chong Wang, Elena Karahanna, Yan Xu
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引用次数: 15

摘要

当今互联网上的隐私需求不同于传统电子商务环境中的信息隐私需求,因为它们关注的是在线同伴之间的互动,而不仅仅是与在线供应商的交易。以同伴为导向的在线互动对个人的虚拟存在和自我认知有着至关重要的影响。然而,现有的互联网隐私问题的概念仅仅集中在对个人信息发布的控制和与在线供应商的在线互动上。在个人边界理论的基础上,本研究重新审视了网络隐私的理论基础,并提出了一个多维的与同伴相关的隐私关注结构,重点关注网络同伴对隐私的侵犯。我们将这种新结构称为“同伴隐私担忧”(PrPC),并将其定义为由于在线同伴的行为而无法在在线活动中保持功能性个人边界的一般感觉。该结构包括四个维度,包括信息隐私问题的重新概念化,也反映了与同伴处理自共享信息和关于自己的同伴共享信息有关的隐私问题,以及三个新的维度,这些维度挖掘了虚拟交互中产生的隐私需求(即,虚拟领地隐私关注和交流隐私关注)以及从需要保持心理独立性(即心理隐私关注)。这些新维度根植于个人边界理论,是与同伴在线社交互动中突出的隐私需求。然而,它们在之前的隐私关注概念中是缺席的。开发了测量这种新结构的量表并进行了经验验证。
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Peer Privacy Concerns: Conceptualization and Measurement
Privacy needs on today’s internet differ from the information privacy needs in traditional e-commerce settings due to their focus on interactions among online peers rather than merely transactions with an online vendor. Peer-oriented online interactions have critical implications for an individual’s virtual presence and self-cognition. Yet existing conceptualizations of internet privacy concerns have solely focused on the control of personal information release and on online interactions with online vendors. Drawing on the theory of personal boundaries, this study revisits the theoretical foundation of online privacy and proposes a multidimensional peer-related privacy concern construct, that focuses on privacy violations from online peers. We term this new construct “Peer Privacy Concern” (PrPC) and define it as the general feeling of being unable to maintain functional personal boundaries in online activities as a result of the behavior of online peers. This construct consists of four dimensions comprised of a reconceptualization of information privacy concerns to also reflect privacy concerns with respect to peers’ handling of self-shared information and with respect to peer-shared information about one’s self, and three new dimensions that tap into the arising privacy needs from virtual interactions (i.e., virtual territory privacy concern and communication privacy concern) as well as from the need to maintain psychological independence (i.e., psychological privacy concern). These new dimensions, which are rooted in the theory of personal boundaries, are prominent privacy needs in online social interactions with peers. However, they are absent from previous privacy concern conceptualizations. Scales for measuring this new construct are developed and empirically validated.
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