2013
DOI: 10.1007/s10660-013-9111-6
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Factors affecting privacy disclosure on social network sites: an integrated model

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Cited by 154 publications
(124 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…The rising importance of security and privacy issues has fostered security and privacy policy research (6 %) in recent years (e.g., Aljukhadar et al 2010;Swamynathan et al 2010;Choi and Jiang 2013;Dhillon and Chowdhuri 2013;Phan and Cavusoglu 2013;Wilson et al 2014;Xu et al 2013). These articles solely investigate social networking sites (5 articles) and social shopping websites (2 articles).…”
Section: Research Theme: Security and Privacy Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rising importance of security and privacy issues has fostered security and privacy policy research (6 %) in recent years (e.g., Aljukhadar et al 2010;Swamynathan et al 2010;Choi and Jiang 2013;Dhillon and Chowdhuri 2013;Phan and Cavusoglu 2013;Wilson et al 2014;Xu et al 2013). These articles solely investigate social networking sites (5 articles) and social shopping websites (2 articles).…”
Section: Research Theme: Security and Privacy Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trust is identified in this model as a facilitating factor. Several studies examined the privacy calculus previously such as Xu, Michael, and Chen (2013) who studied the privacy calculus in combination with the theory of planned behaviour, Krasnova, Veltri, and Günther (2012) who examined the role of culture on the privacy calculus, and Krasnova, Spiekermann, Koroleva, and Hildebrand (2010) who found trust and perceived control to be mitigating factors for privacy risks. Here we build on these studies by examining the mediating role of expected risks and benefits from the sharing of information on the relationship between relationship between of age and use or non-use with concern regarding privacy.…”
Section: Risk-benefit Trade-offmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Self-disclosure behavior can be characterized by its intent, as well as by the amount, honesty, depth, and valence of the disclosed information (Posey et al, 2010). Consistent with TPB, self-disclosure intentions are influenced by perceived benefit, perceived risk, privacy concerns, information control, and sensitivity (Xu, Michael, & Chen, 2013). Other motivating factors for information disclosure include internet trust, personal internet interest (Dinev & Hart, 2006), social validation, self-expression, relational development (Bazarova & Choi, 2014), and entertainment (Utz, 2015).…”
Section: Information Sharing On Snsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, motivating factors appear to be stronger predictors of self-disclosure behavior that the inhibitors. For example, perceived convenience in relationship maintenance has a stronger influence on self-disclosure behavior than perceived privacy risk (Krasnova, Spiekermann, Koroleva, & Hildebrand, 2010), and perceived benefit has a stronger effect on self-disclosure intentions than privacy concerns (Xu et al, 2013).…”
Section: Information Sharing On Snsmentioning
confidence: 99%